Renewals

A new agreement can reset the clock on deposit protection.

A renewed tenancy or landlord change can create new deposit protection obligations your landlord may have missed.

Check your eligibility

Renewals create new obligations

When your tenancy was renewed, your landlord changed, or a new fixed term was signed, fresh deposit protection duties may have applied.

Many landlords treat the original protection as enough and never update the scheme record or paperwork.

Find out if you have a claim.

RentersProtect checks your tenancy against the deposit protection rules at no cost.

Check eligibility

Old records may no longer match

The scheme record from your original tenancy may show the wrong address, amount, tenant names or landlord details after a renewal.

These mismatches can mean the protection no longer covers your current tenancy, even if a record exists.

This needs a proper review

Renewal and landlord change cases are among the most commonly missed deposit breaches, and among the hardest for renters to assess alone.

RentersProtect checks whether your tenancy changes created a compliance gap you can claim on.

Next step

Find out if you have a claim.

Find out whether your tenancy renewal or landlord change created a deposit protection breach.

Check eligibility

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