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evidence
Housing Law
Updated 2026-04-09

Evidence Checklist for a Tenancy Deposit Dispute

Documents to gather when your landlord has failed to return your deposit or made unfair deductions.

Overview

Landlords who make deductions from a tenancy deposit must justify each one. The burden is generally on the landlord to prove damage beyond fair wear and tear. A well-documented evidence bundle — particularly a detailed check-in and check-out inventory — puts you in a strong position in the deposit scheme's Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) process or in court.

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Tenancy Documents

Signed tenancy agreement (AST)(Essential)

Deposit protection certificate and prescribed information(Essential)

Your landlord must have protected the deposit within 30 days of receiving it (Housing Act 2004, s.213)

Any written tenancy renewals or extensions

Tenancy check-in inventory (signed by both parties)(Essential)

This is your most important document — it establishes the baseline condition

Tenancy check-out inventory or report(Essential)

Photographic Evidence

Timestamped photographs taken on move-in day(Essential)

Cover every room, noting any pre-existing damage

Timestamped photographs taken on move-out day(Essential)

Photos of any repairs you carried out during the tenancy

Photos showing general cleanliness on departure

Communication Trail

All emails and letters about repairs, deposit deductions, or disputes(Essential)

Any receipts for professional cleaning or repairs you arranged

Undercuts any landlord claim you left the property dirty or damaged

Evidence of deposit scheme used (DPS, MyDeposits, or TDS)(Essential)

Record of when you requested the deposit back and the landlord's response(Essential)

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