Free Tools for UK Landlords

Use our free calculators, letter builders, and checks to understand your position quickly, then move into a full landlord pack if you need the paperwork for the next step.

Build the notice, service file, court pack, claim pack, or tenancy document around your facts before you pay.

  • Answer plain-English questions and get documents built around your case, not a blank template.
  • Preview the pack before payment, fix the facts, and regenerate without starting again.
  • Use a fixed-price, instant workflow for the landlord file you actually need.

Tool hub

Use the free tool first, then choose the landlord document route

This hub is for landlords who need a fast check before committing to paperwork. Use the calculators and checkers to clarify arrears, HMO licensing, rent increase risk, notice timing, and next-step evidence. If the result shows you need documents, the page routes you toward the right paid pack instead of leaving you with a loose answer.

What each tool checks

Dates, figures, council/licensing indicators, rent evidence, and whether a landlord should prepare a notice, court pack, tenancy agreement, money claim, or rent increase pack next.

Limits and next action

The free tools are guidance helpers, not legal advice. Treat the result as a practical checklist, then use the linked product route when you need documents, proof, service records, or a stronger file.

Compliance Timing Tools

England eviction notice route

England update

We are aligned with the Renters' Rights Act

If you are starting an England possession case now, Section 21 is historical only. The first question is not "which old route did I use before?" It is "what actually happened, which current ground applies, and what can I prove?"

Older tenancies can still raise historic paperwork questions, so if your tenancy or notice dates cross the changeover, check that first before you serve anything. For live cases, follow the current England notice and possession rules.

The mistake that costs time is following historical guidance instead of checking the current framework first.

  • What the tenant has actually done: arrears, damage, breach, or refusal to leave.
  • Which current England grounds may apply, and whether the dates and evidence support them.
  • Whether this is a notice problem, a possession claim, a money claim for unpaid rent, or both.
  • How you will serve the paperwork and keep proof for court later.