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England tenancy agreements for landlords, updated for the post-May 2026 rules.4.8/5 | 1072 reviews
Renters Rights Bill Tenancy AgreementRenters Rights Bill Tenancy Agreement
Landlords still search using Bill phrasing, but from 1 May 2026 new England agreements generally move into the assured periodic framework. This page captures the old search language and directs it into the current England agreement routes.
Start here if you need the main guide on this issue. If your situation is narrower or you want the next practical step, go to Section 21 ending in 2026.
If you want the wider background first, read England tenancy agreements for landlords.
Ready to act? The quickest route from here is England tenancy agreement generator.
Bill keyword, current England route
This page intentionally targets the phrase renters rights bill tenancy agreement because that remains a live search term used by landlords.
The product wording itself now focuses on the current England position from 1 May 2026 and routes landlords into the right Standard or Premium agreement flow instead of keeping them in older AST-era language.
Common landlord searches for this setup
These are the phrases landlords usually use when they are trying to find the right agreement for this kind of let. The important part is making sure the agreement matches the way the property is actually being occupied.
What this agreement covers
- Dedicated page for the Bill-era search query
- Explains the terminology shift without dropping the search intent
- Routes users into the current England agreement flows rather than legacy AST sales pages
How this fits the current England rules
- Uses current England transition wording in customer copy
- Keeps Bill phrasing for search-intent targeting only
- Supports the assured periodic framework used for new England lets from 1 May 2026

