If you’re not ready to sell, letting your home is a great option. But if you’re planning to manage it all yourself – marketing, compliance, referencing, rent collection, inspections, legal notices, tenant disputes – you’re not just letting your home…

It’s every landlord’s worst-case scenario. The tenancy ends, notice is served, but the tenant doesn’t leave. They stop replying. They keep paying late. Or worse – they stop paying at all. Here’s what you need to know when things don’t go to plan.

It starts with good intentions – save money, keep control, and manage your property yourself. How hard can it be?

You’ve found a tenant, handed over the keys, and the rent’s coming in. Job done, right? Maybe not.

Sounds dramatic, right? But it happens more often than you’d think. Good people, renting out their property with the best intentions, end up in legal trouble they never saw coming.

There’s a common idea that letting out your old place is easy money – just hand over the keys, set up a standing order, and watch the rent roll in. But the truth? It’s a bit more involved than that.

Thinking about renting out your home? Maybe you’re moving, upsizing, or keeping your options open. It seems straightforward enough – find a tenant, collect the rent, and carry on. But here’s the truth: it’s not that simple.

Before you list, here’s what you need to know to avoid sitting unsold, missing the right buyer or losing thousands. A few smart decisions now can change everything.

There are still too many landlords out there paying for a “managed” service that barely covers the basics – vague updates, tick-box compliance, rushed lets, and reactive communication. It's NOT RIGHT!

Most landlords think the only way to earn more from their rental is to increase the rent and hope the market agrees. But we’ve helped dozens of landlords achieve better returns without hiking the rent - How?

Being a landlord isn’t always hands-off. Late-night maintenance calls, changing regulations, awkward conversations, unexpected costs – it can wear you down fast. That’s where we come in.

Letting a property isn’t rocket science – but it’s not passive income either. The landlords who get the best results are the ones who treat it like a business from day one.