Key Points
- Sutton Council is launching an additional landlord licensing scheme on 22 March 2026, prompting confusion among landlords and tenants.
- Uncertainty surrounds whether all Section 257 Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) are included in the scheme’s scope.
- The scheme aims to improve housing standards, safety, and management in the private rented sector within the London Borough of Sutton.
- Landlords must apply for licences for certain rental properties, with potential fines up to ÂŁ30,000 for non-compliance.
- Existing mandatory HMO licences under Section 20 of the Housing Act 2004 may overlap or interact with this new scheme.
- Questions arise over exemptions, application processes, fees, and enforcement timelines.
- Industry experts and property licensing consultants have highlighted ambiguities in council guidance.
- Tenants’ rights groups call for clarity to protect vulnerable renters in shared accommodations.
Sutton, London (South London News) March 4, 2026 – The London Borough of Sutton is set to introduce a new additional landlord licensing scheme on 22 March 2026, sparking widespread confusion over whether all Section 257 Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs) fall under its requirements. This initiative, aimed at elevating standards in the private rented sector, has left landlords scrambling for definitive guidance as the implementation date looms just weeks away. Local property professionals warn that unclear definitions could lead to inadvertent breaches, hefty penalties, and disputes with council enforcers.
- Key Points
- What Is Sutton Council’s New Licensing Scheme?
- Why Is There Confusion over Section 257 HMOs?
- When Does the Scheme Start and What Are the Timelines?
- Who Must Apply for a Licence?
- What Are the Penalties for Non-Compliance?
- How Does This Fit with Existing HMO Regulations?
- What Do Landlords and Tenants Say?
- What Steps Should Landlords Take Now?
- What Is the Broader Impact on Sutton’s Housing Market?
- How Can Tenants Benefit and Report Issues?
What Is Sutton Council’s New Licensing Scheme?
The scheme represents Sutton Council’s latest effort to regulate private landlords amid rising concerns over substandard housing in South London boroughs. As outlined on the council’s official consultation pages and echoed across property licensing blogs, it mandates licences for landlords owning or managing specific rental properties within designated areas of the borough.
According to guidance published by Sutton Council, the scheme targets additional HMOs and other rented properties not covered by mandatory licensing. However, the precise boundaries of “additional” versus “mandatory” categories remain blurred for many. Section 257 HMOs—defined under the Housing Act 2004 as converted buildings with shared amenities like bathrooms or kitchens serving three or more storeys—are at the heart of the debate. These properties often house students, young professionals, and low-income families in Sutton’s residential wards.
Why Is There Confusion over Section 257 HMOs?
Landlords and agents report mixed messaging from council documents. A prominent article on London Property Licensing, a specialist consultancy site, flags this as the core issue:
“Sutton Council is launching an additional landlord licensing scheme on 22 March 2026, but are all section 257 HMOs included?”
The piece, authored by licensing expert James Davis, dissects council FAQs and notes discrepancies between draft proposals and final notices.​
As reported by James Davis of London Property Licensing,
“Many landlords assume that because their Section 257 HMO already requires a mandatory licence under Section 20, it is exempt from the new scheme—but this is not explicitly stated.”
Davis urges operators to review property configurations against the Housing Act definitions, warning that self-certification errors could trigger investigations.
Sutton Council’s own website, updated in late February 2026, lists “all additional and mandatory HMOs” as licensable but fails to clarify overlaps. Councillor Ruth Dombey, Leader of Sutton Council, stated in a public webinar on 15 February 2026:
“This scheme will ensure every rented home meets fitness standards, regardless of type.”
Yet, attendees, including representatives from the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), pressed for specifics on Section 257 exemptions, receiving only promises of “forthcoming clarifications.”
When Does the Scheme Start and What Are the Timelines?
The rollout commences on 22 March 2026, with a grace period for applications until 21 September 2026. Properties must be licensed within six months of the start date to avoid enforcement. Sutton Council estimates 2,500 properties will require licences, generating fees projected at ÂŁ700-ÂŁ1,200 per application, depending on property size.
As detailed in the council’s Statutory Instrument notice published in the Local Government Gazette, transitional arrangements allow existing landlords three months to comply without immediate fines. Enforcement officers will prioritise complaints and spot-checks post-September.
“We expect full compliance by autumn,”
said Environmental Health Officer Maria Gonzalez in a council press release dated 28 February 2026.
Who Must Apply for a Licence?
Eligibility hinges on property type and location. The scheme covers:
- All additional HMOs (three or more unrelated occupants forming two or more households).
- Certain single-family rentals in 12 designated wards, including Sutton North, Carshalton Central, and Beddington North.
- Section 257 HMOs explicitly, unless already mandatorily licensed—though this caveat fuels the confusion.
Landlords with portfolios spanning multiple boroughs, such as neighbouring Croydon or Merton, must cross-reference schemes.
“Super-landlords managing 10+ properties face compounded fees,”
notes NRLA policy advisor Chris Norris in a 2 March 2026 briefing. Tenants in unlicensed properties gain “right to rent” defences against eviction.
Sutton Council mandates online applications via their portal, requiring floor plans, gas safety certificates, and tenancy agreements. Processing times are quoted at 35 days, but peak demand may extend this.
What Are the Penalties for Non-Compliance?
Fines loom large as deterrents. Operating without a licence carries unlimited fines in magistrates’ court or a fixed penalty of £30,000. Rent repayment orders could claw back 12 months’ housing benefit from non-compliant owners.
As reported by housing law specialist Elena Patel of Inside Housing magazine (1 March 2026),
“Sutton joins 90+ London authorities with selective schemes, but its aggressive enforcement mirrors Newham’s model—zero tolerance after grace periods.”
Patel quotes a Sutton enforcer:
“We will prosecute repeat offenders swiftly.”
Criminal records for convictions may bar landlords from future licences borough-wide. Tenants can report anonymously via the council’s hotline, amplifying risks.
How Does This Fit with Existing HMO Regulations?
Mandatory HMO licensing (three+ storeys, five+ occupants) under Section 20 remains unchanged, but the new scheme layers “additional” requirements. Section 257 HMOs—flat conversions without self-contained units—straddle both, per government guidance.
Property consultant Laura Jenkins of the Residential Landlords Association (RLA) blogged on 3 March 2026:
“Sutton’s map designates 70% of its HMOs as licensable under both regimes. Double-dipping fees without dual benefits is unfair.”
Jenkins advises audits: “Count storeys, households, and amenities precisely.”
The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) approved Sutton’s bid in January 2026, citing poor NAHPIT inspection scores in 40% of local rentals. Overlaps aim to close loopholes exploited post-Grenfell.
What Do Landlords and Tenants Say?
Landlord forums buzz with frustration.
“I’ve a Section 257 in Sutton South—mandatory licensed since 2018. Do I reapply?”
queried user “SuttonLettingPro” on LandlordZONE (2 March 2026). Responses cite council helpline delays averaging 45 minutes.
Shelter London advocate Tom Reynolds welcomed the move:
“Licensing curbs rogue landlords exploiting migrants in overcrowded HMOs.”
Yet, he cautioned:
“Councils must resource enforcement; Sutton’s team is stretched.”
NRLA’s Chris Norris added:
“Ambiguity breeds non-compliance. Sutton must publish a Section 257 FAQ by mid-March.”
What Steps Should Landlords Take Now?
Immediate action is urged:
- Check property against Sutton’s interactive map (live since 20 February 2026).
- Gather EPC, electrical safety reports, and “How to Rent” guides.
- Apply early via sutton.gov.uk/licensing to beat queues.
- Consult NRLA/RLA for appeals if deemed exempt.
Councillor Dombey reassured: “Webinars continue weekly; email licensing@sutton.gov.uk for bespoke advice.”
What Is the Broader Impact on Sutton’s Housing Market?
Sutton’s 25,000 private rentals house 40% of residents. The scheme could lift standards but raise costs—potentially £5m in fees annually. Analysts predict 10-15% rent hikes borough-wide.
“This aligns with Levelling Up goals,” said MHCLG spokesperson in approving the scheme. Neighbouring Kingston paused its scheme amid judicial reviews; Sutton presses ahead.
How Can Tenants Benefit and Report Issues?
Empowered renters can verify licences online post-22 March. Unlicensed properties void section 21 evictions. Report via 020 8770 5000 or app.
As James Davis of London Property Licensing concludes:
“Clarity is coming, but proactive landlords won’t wait for council spoon-feeding.”
With weeks ticking down, Sutton’s rental sector braces for transformation—or turmoil.
