For renters · England · Your data stays yours

Know your rights, protect your deposit, leave on your terms

Renting is stressful enough without wondering whether your deposit is actually protected, what your landlord can and can't do, or how to leave without losing money. House Chapter puts the answers, tools and evidence in your pocket.

Six free tools built for renters

Deposit protection checker

Verify your deposit is in an approved scheme. If it isn't, know exactly what to do and what you're owed.

Know your rights cards

Six key rights every renter should know, with the law behind each one and what to do if they're breached.

End-of-tenancy checklist

Eight steps to maximise your deposit return: from serving notice correctly to requesting your deposit back in writing.

Private document vault

Store your tenancy agreement, inventory, gas safety cert and correspondence. Only you can see them.

Address change tracker

38 organisations to notify when you move, prioritised by urgency, with direct links. Renter-specific items included.

Supplier cost tracker

Track your energy, broadband and insurance costs. Know when contracts end and log savings when you switch.

Your rights at a glance

Six things every renter in England should know.

Your deposit must be protected

Landlords in England must place your deposit in a government-backed scheme within 30 days of receiving it.

Housing Act 2004, ss.213-215

Your landlord must keep the property in repair

The structure, exterior, and installations for water, gas, electricity, heating and sanitation must be kept in repair by the landlord.

Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, s.11

Right to quiet enjoyment

Your landlord cannot enter without permission (except genuine emergencies) and must give at least 24 hours written notice.

Protection from Eviction Act 1977

Notice periods you should know

Under current rules, your landlord must give at least 2 months notice on a Section 21 (no-fault) and follow a strict process.

Housing Act 1988, s.21; Renters' Rights Act (pending)

Minimum housing standards

Rental properties must be free from serious (Category 1) hazards under the Housing Health and Safety Rating System.

Housing Act 2004, Part 1; Awaab's Law 2024

You cannot be refused for a protected characteristic

It is unlawful for landlords or agents to discriminate on grounds of race, disability, sex, religion, sexual orientation, or other protected characteristics.

Equality Act 2010, s.32-35

Is your deposit actually protected?

Your landlord must protect your deposit in one of three government-backed schemes within 30 days. If they haven't, they owe you 1 to 3 times the deposit. Check now:

Deposit Protection Service (DPS)

depositprotection.com

MyDeposits

mydeposits.co.uk

Tenancy Deposit Scheme (TDS)

tenancydepositscheme.com

The deposit checker in your dashboard lets you record which scheme holds your deposit and when it was protected.

End-of-tenancy checklist

Eight steps to leave cleanly and get your full deposit back.

StepWhenWhat to do
1. Serve your notice correctly1 to 2 months beforeCheck your tenancy agreement for the notice period (usually 1 month for periodic, or wait until the end of a fixed term). Give notice in writing and keep proof of delivery.
2. Take dated photos of every roomFinal weekPhotograph the condition of walls, floors, appliances, bathroom, garden and any existing damage. Compare against the check-in inventory if you have one. Timestamped photos are your strongest evidence in a deposit dispute.
3. Professional clean or thorough DIYFinal 2 daysMost tenancy agreements require the property returned in the same condition as move-in, fair wear and tear excepted. A professional end-of-tenancy clean costs around £150 to £350 and is usually cheaper than a deposit deduction for cleaning.
4. Fix minor damage you causedFinal weekFill small nail holes, replace blown light bulbs, fix any damage beyond fair wear and tear. The cost of a tube of filler is far less than the landlord's contractor bill deducted from your deposit.
5. Read all meters and photograph themMoving dayTake final readings for gas, electricity and water on your last day. Photograph the meters with the readings visible. Send the readings to your suppliers and your landlord.
6. Redirect your post and update addresses1 to 2 weeks beforeSet up Royal Mail redirection (from £35 for 3 months). Update your address with banks, DVLA, GP, employer and subscriptions. House Chapter's address change tracker covers 38 organisations.
7. Return all keys and get a receiptMoving dayReturn every key, fob and garage remote you were given. Ask for written confirmation of the return, including the date and time. Unreturned keys are a common (and expensive) deposit deduction.
8. Request your deposit back in writingDay after moving outWrite to your landlord (or agent) confirming you have vacated and requesting the return of your deposit. They have 10 days to agree the amount or begin the dispute process through the protection scheme. If they make deductions, they must provide evidence.

Renters ask us

Is House Chapter free for renters?

Yes. Every feature is free during early access, with no card required. When paid plans launch, the core renter tools (rights checker, deposit tracker, address changes, vault) stay on the free tier.

Can my landlord see my data?

No. Your account is completely private. Your documents, notes and deposit records are visible only to you. House Chapter is built for you, not your landlord.

What about the Renters' Rights Act?

The Renters' Rights Act will abolish Section 21 (no-fault eviction), create a new private rented sector database, and move all tenancies to periodic. House Chapter's rights checker will update as the Act comes into force so you always know the current rules.

I'm renting between homes while buying. Is this for me?

Absolutely. House Chapter started as a home buying companion, so you get the full moving toolkit alongside the renter features. Start your move journey and use the renter tools for however long the rental lasts.

Free for renters

Rights, deposit tracker, vault, address changes and more

No card required. Your landlord never sees your data.

Start free today