Selective Licensing Explained: Does Your Property Need a Licence?

Last updated: March 2026

Selective licensing is a local council tool used to improve housing standards in specific areas. If you own rental properties, you may be required to obtain a licence — or you may not, depending on where your property is located. This guide explains what selective licensing is, who needs it, and what happens if you don't comply.

What Is Selective Licensing?

Selective licensing is a local authority licensing scheme that applies to some (but not all) private rental properties in specific areas within a council's jurisdiction. Councils use selective licensing to:

Unlike mandatory licensing (HMOs — Houses in Multiple Occupation), selective licensing is voluntary for councils to introduce. Only some councils have schemes; many do not.

Which Councils Have Selective Licensing?

As of 2026, several councils operate selective licensing schemes in specific areas. The list changes frequently. Major councils with schemes include:

Important: Selective licensing applies only to properties in designated areas within a council area — not the whole council. Check your postcode with your council to confirm coverage.

Do You Need a Licence?

Not all rental properties in licensing areas are covered. Typical exclusions include:

If your property is a standard rental property in a designated area, you almost certainly need a licence.

How to Check if You Need a Licence

Step 1: Find your local council (usually your postcode on a council tax bill)

Step 2: Visit the council website and search for "selective licensing"

Step 3: Check if your property's postcode/address falls within a designated area

Step 4: If designated, contact the licensing team to confirm eligibility

Most councils have free online postcode checkers. Use them to verify your property status.

Licence Requirements & Standards

If your property is subject to selective licensing, you must:

Fees & Duration

Typical Fee Structure

Scenario Typical Cost Duration
Standard flat/property £500–£1,200 5 years
HMO (if selective licensing applies) £1,000–£2,000 5 years
Early renewal (before expiry) Discounted (varies) 5 years from renewal
Late application (after deadline) Up to 2× standard fee 5 years

Check your specific council's fees — they vary significantly. Some councils charge per property; others charge per landlord (if you own multiple properties in the scheme).

Application Process

Step 1: Prepare Documentation

Step 2: Submit Application

Most councils accept online applications. Some require paper applications. Submit before the deadline (councils typically give 6 weeks' notice before schemes go live).

Step 3: Council Reviews & Verification

The council will verify your documents, confirm property standards, and may conduct an inspection. Turnaround: typically 4–8 weeks.

Step 4: Receive Licence

If approved, you'll receive your selective licensing certificate. Display it in the property (some schemes require this).

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Failing to obtain a licence when required is a serious offence.

The risk is real: Councils actively enforce selective licensing, especially in high-problem areas. Inspections and enforcement visits are common.

Benefits of Licensing (From a Landlord Perspective)

While licensing feels bureaucratic, it has advantages:

Key Dates & Deadlines

When a new selective licensing scheme is introduced, councils typically:

Subscribe to your council's newsletter or check their website regularly. Councils are required to notify landlords, but many miss the notices.

What to Do Now (2026)

  1. Check if your properties fall within a selective licensing area (council website)
  2. If yes, apply immediately if a scheme is active, or note deadlines if upcoming
  3. Prepare all required documentation (gas safety, electrical, insurance, tenancy agreement)
  4. Budget for licensing fees (cost varies £500–£1,500 per property)
  5. Keep your licence current — don't let it expire

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