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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Renting the house to go travelling

35 replies

Travellingfun · 12/04/2026 14:50

We are considering renting the house out for a year to go travelling when DD2 finishes school.

I understand there are lots of new rules and regulations which protect the tenants. Can someone advise please? Will airbnb be a better option?

OP posts:
HappiestSleeping · 12/04/2026 18:09

You can definitely issue a notice to leave if you want to move back in or sell, however the risk is that the tenant doesn't leave. It is very costly to take them to court, and time consuming. Even if you win, the maximum you will get back is 60% of your costs.

I've just been through this to get a tenant out who was supposed to leave a year ago. He hadn't paid rent for months, and it cost nearly £20k in legal bills. Even then we mediated in preference to court for speed.

I don't know how Air BnB operates, but if you are going to rent it out, don't do it by a tenancy agreement unless your appetite for risk is huge.

ANutAsBigAsABoulder · 12/04/2026 18:10

There are a variety of guardian type services that will put short-term tenants in to look after a property. I’ve seen a few advertising residential services with the changes to housing law coming in. Not sure you get as much money as from renting direct, but depends what is a priority for you.

MN2025 · 12/04/2026 18:17

Travellingfun · 12/04/2026 14:50

We are considering renting the house out for a year to go travelling when DD2 finishes school.

I understand there are lots of new rules and regulations which protect the tenants. Can someone advise please? Will airbnb be a better option?

It’s the costs you’ve got to weigh up.

You’ll need to put your personal possessions into storage so that will incur a cost for the year if you rent out unfurnished…
even if you rent furnished or AirBNB - there will be sentimental / personal belongings that you wouldn’t be able to leave in the property.

if you decide to Airbnb - then you’ll need someone who will manage the changeovers and be on hand to assist guests - given that you are travelling and presumably on different time zones you won’t always be contactable. This can be costly.

You also have the stress that if the tenants don’t pay - this will ruin your travelling experience… also if they refuse to leave at the end of the tenancy or damage your property.

all points to consider.

If you don’t need the money, I wouldn’t bother with renting it out. Just get a neighbour to check in and make sure everything is okay.

Birdsongisangry · 12/04/2026 19:02

AliceAbsolum · 12/04/2026 18:08

If you want to move back into your own home then that doesn't count as no fault eviction.

Just get good landlord insurance and vet the tenants yourself and you will likely be fine.

Life is short, you should do it!

Moving back in is allowed, but it's under section 8, as section 21 will no longer exist. There's a longer timescale and more financial risk to the landlord.

Travellingfun · 12/04/2026 21:36

Thank you.

We need to do more research; doesn’t seem straight forward

OP posts:
Chatsbots · 12/04/2026 21:40

It's not anymore. It's really pretty difficult, mainly as no-one really knows how the new system is going to work.

There's also making tax digital soon if it's over a certain amount.

Travellingfun · 13/04/2026 08:22

Chatsbots · 12/04/2026 21:40

It's not anymore. It's really pretty difficult, mainly as no-one really knows how the new system is going to work.

There's also making tax digital soon if it's over a certain amount.

Thank you

OP posts:
Gonnagetgoingreturnsagain · 13/04/2026 08:28

Would never do this in a million years nowadays for reasons listed in PP’s.

PrincessofWells · 13/04/2026 08:34

Birdsongisangry · 12/04/2026 16:00

The key thing with the new renters rights bill is banning no fault evictions. So that means you can't rent it out for a time limited period and give notice when want to move back in - it's legally the tenants home, for them to stay in as long as they wish, unless they do something seriously wrong and you can apply to the court to evict them.
Airbnb may be an option but there are rules in London about what is allowed and the management costs can be significant.

This is incorrect. Very little has changed because it's the Ops own home, and there is still a mandatory ground to repossess if they want it back to live in. However this ground cannot be used within the first 12 months of a tenancy.

WateringCans · 13/04/2026 08:38

7238SM · 12/04/2026 15:54

Sorry this is long!

We did similar pre-covid when DH and I worked abroad part of each year and often travelled. 11mths was the longest we were away but it was mainly for 4mth stints. We have a 2 bed flat with roof terrace between zone 1-2, and somewhere separate to securely store private documents/clothes etc. We had a buy to let mortgage on it anyways, but this and insurance is something you'd need to look into.

-We had a company manage it through AirBNB. They did the listing, organised cleaning, linen etc. At that time, they only took on properties within zone 1 or 2. We vetted 4 companies before choosing that one.

-We paid a higher fee percentage to have a meet/greet service. The 2nd time we rented it out though, they said that if guests arrive after say 11pm, they leave the key at a local convenience store that have key locks. The 3rd time we rented it, it turned out that they no longer did meet/greet and ALL guests had to collect keys from the convenience store. This would be ok because there was a shop underneath, BUT, that shop didn't have a key holding service and the nearest shop that did, was a 25min round trip to walk too. If I was a guest with luggage/family etc, this would be the last thing I'd want to do potentially in the dark in central London! IF you could attach a key lock thing on/near your property, I suppose that could work.

-The longer we had the booking calendar open, the more likely we were to get bookings, but even at its best, occupancy only averaged about 50%.

-The company were supposed to flux the price depending if it was a bank holiday, Christmas, major event nearby etc. They cocked up one time and someone had very cheap week over Christmas/NYE. I suspect they rented it to a 'friend' or themselves, but have no proof.

-Overall we only had a cheap blanket stolen, hair dryer and some air plants

-Initially, the company were fairly small. We'd leave a locked cupboard full of toilet paper, kitchen roll, bin bags etc and the cleaner would replenish using those. As the company expanded, they then wanted £20 a month for such incidentals. I felt this was ridiculous, especially when some months, it might have only been rented for 2 nights!

-Occasionally, we'd fly back for a weekend and stay in our flat. Initially, this was easy and no bother. As the company expanded, this too came with additional fees and rules.

-We knew our neighbours well and they contacted us twice about noise.

-During the time, London bought in a 3mth rule for short term lets. From memory this was booked nights, so if we only had it booked for 2 weeks over a 3mth period, then that was only 2 weeks worth of booking.

-After this change, the management company wanted to also list our flat on booking.com and other platforms. I wasn't keen that those sites have no reviews of the actual guest, plus, I felt they wanted to do this to try to cover up renting more than 3mths in a year. We stopped it all together because it had just changed so much from the 1st time we'd rented it out.

-The last time we went away, pre covid, we had a family friend stay for 3mths. She was in her 50's ex police woman and now a solicitor. Unknown to us, she let her 18yr old son stay in our flat. He has parties, broke things, smashed a hole through the wall plaster and it was left an absolute mess.

I wouldn't do AirBNB/management company again and very unlikely to rent to a 'friend'. Is your place near a hospital/uni/corporate company where staff might want year long rents or shorter rents? This likely isn't helpful at all OP, but happy to answer any questions.

I’m stunned that your friend didn’t put all those things right before you came home. That’s so rude !!

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