No, I’m afraid not.Can the landlord rent the apartment by each bedroom,
Yeah, I’m afraid that’s the ultimate impact of rent controls.If this cant be done they will sell it as it doesnt make economic sense
One option is to move back in yourself and let the two rooms. Occupants would be licensees and there would be no tenancy.say charge 600 for each bedroom and therefore get the market rent but through multi occupancy tensnt agreements?
What you are describing is a joint tenancy.
Technically you are creating a new joint tenancy each time you add a new tenant to the arrangement.
Each joint tenant has to be in a position to access their room, shared areas, etc. They are not simply renting a room.
You can rent each room separately (though I think you are making a rod for your own back).
However the lease can only be registered to one address & the total rent will be set via RPZ rules.
Technically you are creating a new joint tenancy each time you add a new tenant to the arrangement.
Each joint tenant has to be in a position to access their room, shared areas, etc. They are not simply renting a room.
Only if they are properly recognised (e.g. planning permission / pre-63) as separate dwellings.register more than one tenancy at a particular address, eg. Main Street #1A, 1B, 1C etc. with separate rent terms?
Thanks. So if a LL did an internal refurb to the layout of say a large house and put en-suites, washer dryer, ff, cooking equip, and door locks and adjusted the ground level to incorporate sleeping and en-suite, he couldn't give eg. 4 people separate tenancy agreements unless he has PP, building regs and presumably fire certs and separate insurance cover.Only if they are properly recognised (e.g. planning permission / pre-63) as separate dwellings.
I don't believe you can do this and remain compliant with planning / fire regs / housing regs & anything else you can think of.What if its remains a single house with one entrance and just has the internal layout altered
Altering the internal layout to add en-suites and the like is exempted development. In a typical home here, it would be difficult to squeeze in separate laundry and cooking facilities as required for rental accommodation. If the goal is just to avoid RTB oversight, then as per the other thread, let each room individually under license.Is that only where the separate units in a building could be sold individually? What if its remains a single house with one entrance and just has the internal layout altered?
Be wary about this approach; I don't believe we can declare that this arrangement will stand up to challenge.If the goal is just to avoid RTB oversight, then as per the other thread, let each room individually under license.
It works so long as the each licensee signs a separate agreement that is clear and unambiguous, and the landlord maintains continuous access, perhaps reinforcing that with a regular visit to check in. In practice it's not something most landlords want to go messing with as they need to find all the people separately, look for replacements when any of them leave, and deal with any inter-personal issues that arise from time to time.Be wary about this approach; I don't believe we can declare that this arrangement will stand up to challenge.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?