Tenant
A tenant is the occupier of a leasehold estate or, in simple terms, someone who occupies land or property that they rent from a landlord.
A business tenant is somebody who rents or leases the place where they conduct their business. The Landlord and Tenant Act is the governing legislation for landlords and business tenants.
Rent is the payment made by the tenant (or lessee) to the landlord (or lessor) for the temporary use of land, a building, a flat, and so on. The payment is usually made periodically during the time the land, etc. is being used or occupied.
Periodic tenancies that continue on a weekly or monthly basis cannot be subject to more than one rent increase per year by the landlord without the tenant’s agreement.
A fixed-term tenancy, which runs for a defined time period, allows the landlord to increase the rent only if the tenant agrees. Without agreement, the rent can only be increased when the fixed term ends and before it is renewed. However, virtually all commercial leases issued in the UK will contain a provision allowing the landlord to periodically adjust the rent payable by the tenant.
The following obligations apply to any tenancy:
- The landlord must get the tenant’s permission before the rent can be increased by more than previously agreed.
- The rent increase must be fair, realistic, and not out of keeping with average local rents.
- The procedure for increasing rent set out in the tenancy agreement must be adhered to.
- Without such a procedure in the tenancy agreement, the rent can only be increased at the end of the fixed term.
- If the tenancy is weekly or monthly the landlord must give a minimum of one month’s notice for rent increases. If the tenancy yearly then they must give 6 months’ notice.
- Landlords can pursue eviction procedures if a tenant falls behind with rent payments.
Deposits are usually paid by new tenants to landlords to secure the property and provide security in the event of default, or damage to the property. If a home is rented on an assured shorthold tenancy (AST) that started after 6 April 2007, the landlord must put the deposit in a government-backed tenancy deposit scheme (TDP).
Tenants of council housing can form themselves into a group or body known as a tenant management organisation (TMO) which allows them to collectively manage their homes.
[edit] Related articles on Designing Buildings
- Agricultural tenancy.
- Assured private tenancy.
- Assured shorthold tenancy.
- Code of practice for letting and managing agents.
- Excluded occupier.
- Failure to notify tenant.
- Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018.
- Housing tenure.
- How to evict a tenant.
- Landlord.
- Landlord and Tenant Act.
- Leasehold.
- Occupier.
- Rent.
- Rent review.
- Resident.
- Right to rent.
- Section 8 notice.
- Section 13 notice.
- Section 21 notice.
- Social housing.
- Subletting.
- Tenancy deposit protection.
- Tenant management organisation.
Featured articles and news
The future workforce: culture change and skill
Under the spotlight at UK Construction Week London.
A landmark moment for postmodern heritage.
A safe energy transition – ECA launches a new Charter
Practical policy actions to speed up low carbon adoption while maintaining installation safety and competency.
Frank Duffy: Researcher and Practitioner
Reflections on achievements and relevance to the wider research and practice communities.
The 2026 Compliance Landscape: Fire doors
Why 'Business as Usual' is a Liability.
Cutting construction carbon footprint by caring for soil
Is construction neglecting one of the planet’s most powerful carbon stores and one of our greatest natural climate allies.
ARCHITECTURE: How's it progressing?
Archiblogger posing questions of a historical and contextual nature.
The roofscape of Hampstead Garden Suburb
Residents, architects and roofers need to understand detailing.
Homes, landlords. tenants and the new housing standards
What will it all mean?
The Architectural Technology podcast: Where it's AT
Catch-up on the latest episodes.
Edmundson Apprentice of the Year award 2026
Entries now open for this Electrical Contractors' Association award.
Traditional blue-grey slate from one of the oldest and largest UK slate quarries down in Cornwall.
There are plenty of sources with the potential to be redeveloped.
Change of use legislation breaths new life into buildings
A run down on Class MA of the General Permitted Development Order.
Solar generation in the historic environment
Success requires understanding each site in detail.





















Comments
[edit] To make a comment about this article, click 'Add a comment' above. Separate your comments from any existing comments by inserting a horizontal line.