Gas Safety, EICR and EPC: The Certificates Every UK Landlord Must Have in 2026
A practical certificate checklist for UK landlords: gas safety, EICR, EPC, renewal windows, and why expired records can now damage legal outcomes.
TL;DR
- Gas Safety Certificate: renew every 12 months, give to tenants within 28 days
- EICR: renew every 5 years, remedial work done within 28 days of report
- EPC: valid for 10 years, current minimum Band E, Band C expected by October 2030
- Missing certificates can now block a Section 8 possession claim
- Fines range from £5,000 to £30,000 per offence

In this article(8)


Introduction
Certificates have always mattered. But in 2026, they matter more.
Under the old regime, a missing gas safety record or an expired EICR was a compliance failure, but it didn't necessarily stop you regaining possession. Under Section 8, courts can refuse a possession claim if your certificates aren't in order at the time of the hearing.
That changes the stakes. Here's what each certificate requires, how long it lasts, and what slips through the cracks. Running certificate tracking on a spreadsheet across a portfolio is where most gaps happen; LandoraHub tracks every certificate expiry with alerts before renewal is due.
Gas Safety Certificate
What it is: An annual check of all gas appliances, flues and pipework carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer.
How often: Every 12 months, no exceptions. The anniversary of the last check, not a calendar year.
What you must do with it: Give a copy to existing tenants within 28 days of the check. Give a copy to new tenants before they move in. Keep records for two years.
The common mistake: Landlords who own multiple properties and lose track of which property's check is due when. One gas safety certificate per property, each on its own annual cycle. If you've got six properties, you've potentially got six different renewal dates.
Fine for non-compliance: Up to £6,000 per offence. In serious cases, criminal prosecution.
EICR - Electrical Installation Condition Report
What it is: An inspection of the fixed electrical installation (wiring, consumer unit, sockets) carried out by a qualified electrician.
How often: Every five years for most private rentals.
What you must do with it: Give a copy to tenants within 28 days of the inspection. Give a copy to new tenants before they move in. If the report identifies work needed, it must be carried out and evidenced within 28 days (or sooner if the report specifies).
The Section 8 problem: If a tenant doesn't have a valid EICR when you serve a Section 8 notice, you're at risk of the court finding against you. Get the paperwork right before you serve, not after.
Costs: A typical EICR for a two-bedroom flat runs £100-£200 depending on location and who you use. Any remedial work is on top.
💡 Never get caught by an expired certificate again LandoraHub tracks every certificate across your portfolio with email alerts 30 and 60 days before renewal. Start free, never miss a renewal →
EPC - Energy Performance Certificate
What it is: A rating of your property's energy efficiency from A (best) to G (worst), produced by a Domestic Energy Assessor.
How often: Valid for 10 years, but must be current at the start of any new tenancy.
Minimum requirement: Band E is the current legal minimum for new tenancies and renewals. Properties rated F or G cannot legally be let.
What's coming: EPC Band C for new tenancies has been discussed for years. The current expected deadline is October 2030. It's not law yet, but the direction is set. Properties currently rated D or E will need improvement work, and the cost varies considerably depending on construction type.
Practical check: You can look up any property's current EPC certificate and rating at find-energy-certificate.service.gov.uk without logging in. If yours expired without you noticing, this is where you'd find out.
Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarms
Often treated separately but worth covering here.
Smoke alarms must be on every habitable storey. Carbon monoxide alarms must be in any room with a fuel-burning appliance. Both must be tested at the start of every tenancy.
There's no certificate for this, it's a record in your tenancy documentation. If you can't show a tenant signed to confirm alarms were tested, you have a gap.
Right to Rent Checks
Not a certificate as such, but a compliance check landlords sometimes overlook.
Before a tenancy starts, you must check that every tenant has the right to rent in the UK. That means seeing original documents, or using the Home Office online checking service for those with a share code.
Fine for renting to someone without the right to rent: up to £20,000 per tenant. For repeat offences, higher still.
Why Scattered Records Cause Real Problems
The certificates themselves are usually fine. What lets landlords down is knowing which one is current, where it is, and when it needs renewing.
A gas safety check for one property might be due in February. The EICR for another runs out in September. If you're tracking this across a folder on the desktop, a shared drive and several email threads, gaps appear.
One Dashboard for Every Certificate
Certificates are simple in principle. They become a problem when you're juggling renewal dates across a portfolio without a central record.
LandoraHub tracks every certificate per property, flags upcoming renewals, and stores the actual PDFs so you can produce them instantly if a tenant, council or court asks.
Start free on LandoraHub - know every certificate is current →
Sources:
- GOV.UK - Gas safety (Installation and Use) Regulations 1998
- GOV.UK - Electrical safety standards in the private rented sector (England)
- GOV.UK - Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards (MEES) for private rented properties
- Home Office - Right to Rent checks guidance
Disclaimer: This article is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Safety regulations are strictly enforced. Always check the current GOV.UK position and use qualified, registered professionals for all inspections and certificates.
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