You have rights here. Let's work out your next step.
Getting a notice to leave your home is frightening, but a notice is not the same as having to go. Many are wrong, early, or invalid. Tell us what has happened and we will check it, explain your options in plain English, and help you act.
The eviction problems we help with
A notice is the start of a process, not the end of your home. These are the situations renters come to us with most, and where knowing your rights changes what happens next.
Section 8 notices
The main route a landlord now uses to seek possession, relying on specific grounds like rent arrears. The ground they pick affects your notice period and whether a court has to agree. We check whether it actually stands up.
Section 21 'no-fault' notices
Section 21 no-fault evictions were abolished from 1 May 2026 under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. If you have been served one, there is a good chance it is no longer valid.
Illegal evictions
Changing the locks, cutting off the utilities, or forcing you out without a court order is illegal. If it has happened to you, you may be entitled to get back in and to compensation.
Possession orders & court
A landlord cannot remove you without a court order, and only court-appointed bailiffs can carry out an eviction. We explain each stage so nothing at court takes you by surprise.
Rent arrears grounds
Being behind on rent does not automatically mean you have to leave. The amount owed, the ground used and the notice period all matter. We help you understand exactly where you stand.
Retaliatory eviction
If a notice landed soon after you complained about repairs or asserted your rights, that matters. We help you show the timeline and understand the protections that apply.
Send us your notice and your story
Send a photo of your notice and tell us what has happened, over WhatsApp, in your own words and in any of 140+ languages. No forms, no jargon, no appointment needed.
Email connected
3 relevant messages found
Hackney Council searched
No HMO licence found
DPS details confirmed
Protected Oct 12th, 38 days late
HM Land Registry searched
Landlord details confirmedWe check the notice and gather your evidence
Remedy reads the notice against the rules, the right form, the notice period, the ground your landlord is relying on, and checks the things that can make it invalid, like your deposit protection and any required licence.
Luca
Today at 12:00Sharessa
Michael
MilesOur team reviews and explains your options
A real person makes contact within four business hours and explains, in plain English, whether the notice holds up, how long the process really takes, and what your options are.
- Rent increase + disrepairEst. £6k–£9kLong-standing tenant served a Section 13 notice raising rent by £500 a month, during four months of unresolved disrepair. The deposit was never protected and the property holds no licence.EvidenceLandlord emails3 · boiler repairsTenancy agreementAST · 14 monthsDepositUnprotectedLicensing registerNo HMO licenceMarket rent£500 over
- Deposit not protected — Rent Repayment Order
- Unlicensed HMO — enforcement + RRO
- Increase above market + ongoing disrepair
Get the right next step
We help you respond, and if your case needs a solicitor or legal aid we hand an anonymised summary to our network of partner firms, so you are never facing it alone.
“Straightforward, transparent, and easy to deal with. Highly recommended if you need support with rental legal matters.”
Vaz
TrustpilotSection 21 no-fault evictions were abolished from 1 May 2026 under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. If you have been served a Section 21 notice, there is a good chance it is no longer valid. Send it to us and we will check it for you straight away.
Section 8 is now the main route a landlord uses to seek possession. It means they are relying on specific legal grounds, for example rent arrears or a breach of your tenancy. The ground they choose affects how much notice you must get and whether a court has to agree. We explain which ground applies to you and whether it actually stands up.
No. A notice is the first step, not an order to go. A landlord cannot remove you without a court order, and only court-appointed bailiffs can carry out an eviction. That gives you time to get the notice checked and to respond properly.
If a landlord wants to end your tenancy against your wishes, they usually have to apply to the court for a possession order, and you get the chance to put your side. Even then, only court-appointed bailiffs can carry out an eviction. We explain each stage so nothing takes you by surprise.
Your first conversation is always free, and most situations start at no cost. If your case needs more, we will be honest with you about what it involves before anything happens. No surprises.
Send us your notice. We'll tell you where you stand.
It takes a few minutes to start, and you do not need to understand the law first. That is our job.