Proceso de desahucio de inquilinos (Sección 21/Sección 8)
Comprender el proceso legal de desahucio de una propiedad de alquiler privada.
Visión general
Landlords in England must follow a strict legal process to evict a tenant. There are two main routes: Section 21 (Housing Act 1988) for 'no-fault' eviction at the end of an assured shorthold tenancy, and Section 8 (Housing Act 1988) for eviction based on specific grounds such as rent arrears or anti-social behaviour. A landlord cannot lawfully evict a tenant without a court order — doing so is a criminal offence (Protection from Eviction Act 1977). The Renters' Reform Bill (expected to become law) will abolish Section 21 notices.
Proceso paso a paso
Receive a Valid Notice
The landlord must serve a valid written notice. A Section 21 notice gives at least 2 months' notice and cannot be served in the first 4 months of a tenancy. A Section 8 notice specifies the ground(s) for possession and gives 2 weeks to 2 months' notice depending on the ground. The notice must be on the correct prescribed form.
- Check the notice is on the correct form (Form 6A for Section 21)
- The landlord must have complied with deposit protection, EPC, gas safety, and How to Rent guide requirements — failure invalidates a Section 21 notice
- A Section 8 notice must specify the ground and give adequate particulars
Seek Advice Immediately
Contact a housing advice service, Citizens Advice, or Shelter as soon as you receive a notice. Check whether the notice is valid and whether you have any defences. You do not have to leave when the notice expires — the landlord must obtain a court order.
- Free housing advice is available from Shelter (0808 800 4444) and Citizens Advice
- You may be eligible for legal aid for housing cases
Court Proceedings
If you do not leave after the notice expires, the landlord must apply to the County Court for a possession order. For Section 21, the landlord uses the accelerated possession procedure (no hearing required if papers are in order). For Section 8, there will usually be a hearing where both sides can present their case.
- You will receive court papers and have 14 days to file a defence
- For Section 8 cases, challenge whether the ground is made out and whether it is reasonable to make an order
- For Section 21, check all procedural requirements have been met — many claims fail on technicalities
Possession Order and Enforcement
If the court grants a possession order, it will specify a date by which you must leave (usually 14 days, or 42 days in cases of exceptional hardship). If you do not leave by that date, the landlord can apply for a warrant of possession (bailiff eviction). Only county court bailiffs can lawfully carry out the eviction.
- You can apply to the court to suspend or postpone the warrant in exceptional circumstances
- Contact your local council's housing options team — you may be entitled to homelessness assistance
- Illegal eviction (changing locks, harassment) is a criminal offence — call the police and your council's tenancy relations officer
Costes
Advertencias importantes
Never leave your home just because a landlord tells you to — they must obtain a court order. Leaving voluntarily may affect your right to homelessness assistance.
If a landlord tries to evict you without a court order (changing locks, intimidation, cutting off utilities), this is illegal eviction — a criminal offence under the Protection from Eviction Act 1977.