Section 8 Grounds for Possession: A Practical Guide for UK Landlords
Section 21 is gone. This guide explains how Section 8 grounds work in 2026, which grounds landlords use most, and what evidence is needed for a stronger claim.
TL;DR
- Section 21 was abolished on 1 May 2026; all possession claims now use Section 8
- Mandatory grounds force the court to grant possession if proven
- Discretionary grounds let the court refuse even with strong evidence
- Ground 8 (two months' arrears) is the most commonly used ground
- Strong documentation beats clever legal arguments in every claim

In this article(7)


Introduction
Section 21 is gone. From 1 May 2026, every possession claim in England goes through Section 8, and if you haven't looked closely at how it works, now is the time.
This isn't just a legal technicality. Section 8 is now the only route to regaining your property. Understanding which grounds apply to your tenancies, what evidence you need, and how the process runs is basic landlord knowledge in 2026.
If you're managing multiple tenancies, keeping payment records and communication logs organised is now a compliance requirement, not an admin task. LandoraHub logs rent payments and tenant communications per tenancy so you have the evidence ready when you need it.
What Section 8 Actually Is
A Section 8 notice tells a tenant you intend to seek possession, and states the legal ground you're relying on. Unlike Section 21, you need a specific reason. No reason, no possession.
The grounds split into two types. Mandatory grounds mean the court must grant possession if you prove the ground. Discretionary grounds mean the court can grant possession, but doesn't have to.
That distinction matters. If you're relying on a discretionary ground, a judge can still rule against you even if everything you've said is true.
The Grounds You'll Use Most
Ground 8 - Serious rent arrears (mandatory)
The tenant owes at least two months' rent at the point you serve the notice and at the hearing. Both conditions must be met. If the tenant pays down the arrears before the hearing, this ground fails.
Notice period: four weeks minimum.
Ground 10 - Some rent arrears (discretionary)
Tenant is behind on rent but not necessarily by two months. Useful when arrears are building but haven't hit the mandatory threshold yet. Courts will consider the tenant's circumstances.
Ground 11 - Persistent late payment (discretionary)
The tenant keeps paying late, even if they're not currently in arrears. You need a clear record showing the pattern: dates rent was due, dates it arrived.
Ground 1 - Owner wants to move back in (mandatory)
You want to live in the property yourself. Four months' notice required. You can't use this ground in the first 12 months of a tenancy.
Ground 1A - Selling with vacant possession (mandatory)
You want to sell. Four months' notice. Same 12-month restriction applies. Important: after using Ground 1 or 1A, you can't re-let the property for 12 months.
Ground 14 - Antisocial behaviour (discretionary)
The tenant or someone living with them is causing nuisance or annoyance. Can be served immediately with no minimum notice. One of the few grounds where you can move quickly.
๐ก Evidence wins possession claims, not arguments LandoraHub keeps rent payment history, communication logs and certificate records ready to export when you need them. Start free, build the trail today โ
What Evidence You Actually Need
The most common reason possession claims fail isn't the law. It's the paperwork.
For rent arrears grounds, you need a clear rent account showing every payment due and every payment received, with dates. Screenshots from a bank account aren't enough. You need something that shows the full picture over time.
For Ground 1 and 1A, you need to show genuine intention. For selling, that means evidence you're actively marketing or have accepted an offer. For moving in, that means something demonstrating the property will be your actual home.
For antisocial behaviour, you need contemporaneous records. Complaints logged at the time with dates, times and what happened. A statement written months after the fact carries much less weight.
The Notice Periods That Catch Landlords Out
Most Section 8 grounds require at least four weeks notice. Some require four months. Getting this wrong means starting again.
- Ground 8, 10, 11: four weeks
- Ground 1, 1A: four months
- Ground 14: none (can serve immediately)
The notice period runs from when the tenant receives it, not when you send it. Build in a day or two if you're posting.
How This Changes Portfolio Management
With Section 21, many landlords tolerated situations they shouldn't have, such as persistent late payment or minor nuisance, because they could always fall back on a no-fault notice if things got bad enough.
That option is gone. Which means the way you document tenancies matters more now than it ever did.
Every rent payment should be logged with a date. Every complaint should be recorded when it happens. Every letter, warning and conversation that matters should be written down. Not because you expect problems, but because if problems come, you need a trail that holds up in court.
Landlords managing this across spreadsheets and email folders find it hard to pull together when they need it.
Build the Trail Before You Need It
Section 8 claims succeed or fail on documentation. The landlords who win are the ones who logged every late payment, every complaint, every communication while it was happening.
LandoraHub records rent payments, communications and compliance status per tenancy, with exports you can use directly in a court bundle.
Start free on LandoraHub - document everything from day one โ
Sources:
- GOV.UK - Guidance on possession grounds under the Renters' Rights Act
- Housing Act 1988 (as amended)
- Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government statutory guidance
Disclaimer: This article is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal advice. Possession proceedings are legally complex. Always take professional advice from a qualified housing solicitor before serving a notice or issuing proceedings.
Keep reading
Next step
Build your deadline tracker with one property for free. Organise certificates and tenancy actions in one place, then verify final legal requirements through official channels.
Related guides
14 March 2026 ยท 7 min read
Rent Arrears in 2026: How UK Landlords Should Handle Late and Missing Payments
Late rent is now both a cashflow and legal risk. Learn a practical arrears process, when to escalate, and which records matter for any Section 8 route.
Read guide โ21 March 2026 ยท 6 min read
Deposit Protection for UK Landlords: The Rules, the Deadlines and the Fines
Deposit compliance is still a common legal weak point. This guide covers the 30-day rules, prescribed information and consequences of late protection.
Read guide โ16 April 2026 ยท 6 min read
Renters' Rights Act 2026: What UK Landlords Must Do Before 31 May
The Renters' Rights Act came into force on 1 May 2026. Here's exactly what UK landlords must do before the 31 May deadline and the ยฃ7,000 fine you need to avoid.
Read guide โ