Section 8 Notice Grounds, Rights and How to Respond
May 2, 2026

Opening a letter from your landlord's solicitor and seeing the words 'Section 8 notice' is the kind of thing that makes your stomach drop. Your first instinct might be to panic. Don't. A Section 8 notice is not an eviction. It is the start of a legal process, and that process has rules your landlord must follow precisely.
Since Section 21 was abolished on 1 May 2026, Section 8 is now the only legal route a landlord can use to evict a tenant. That shift matters enormously. Every eviction must now be justified by a specific ground, served on the correct form, with the correct notice period. A notice that fails any of those tests is invalid, and a court will throw out the possession claim. There are currently 37 grounds for possession under Section 8, ranging from rent arrears to antisocial behaviour to the landlord wanting to sell (LetCompliance, 2026).
This article explains those grounds in plain terms, tells you which ones you can challenge, and shows you what to do the moment a notice lands on your doormat.
#01What is a Section 8 notice and what does it actually do
A Section 8 notice is a formal document your landlord serves to tell you they intend to apply to court for possession of the property. It does not end your tenancy. It does not mean you have to leave by the date on the notice. What it does is start a clock: once the notice period expires, your landlord can apply to court. If they win at court, a judge issues a possession order. Only if you then fail to leave by the date in that order can bailiffs become involved.
The notice must be served using a prescribed form. It must state which grounds the landlord is relying on and give the correct notice period for those grounds. A landlord cannot just write a letter saying 'please leave' and call it a Section 8 notice. The form matters, the grounds matter, and the notice period matters.
Put simply: your landlord has to prove their case twice. First, that the notice was valid. Second, that the ground for possession is made out. Many landlords get the first part wrong, which is why checking the notice carefully is the first thing you should do.
#02How Section 8 grounds are split: mandatory vs discretionary
The 37 grounds for possession split into two types, and the distinction determines how much room you have to defend yourself.
Mandatory grounds mean the court must grant possession if the landlord proves the ground is satisfied. The judge has no discretion. The most significant mandatory ground is Ground 8: rent arrears. Under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 framework, Ground 8 now requires a tenant to owe at least three months' rent at the date of the notice and at the date of the hearing (LetCompliance, 2026). The threshold was raised from two months to protect tenants from eviction for short-term arrears caused by a payment delay.
Discretionary grounds mean the court can grant possession, but only if it considers it reasonable to do so. Even if the landlord proves the ground, the judge can still refuse the order. Ground 12 (breach of tenancy terms other than rent) and Ground 14 (antisocial behaviour) are both discretionary. A one-off noise complaint at 10pm is unlikely to satisfy a court that eviction is reasonable.
Knowing which type of ground your landlord is relying on tells you immediately how strong your position is. If they are on a discretionary ground, you have genuine arguments to make. If they are on a mandatory ground like Ground 8, your best defence is almost always to reduce the arrears before the hearing date.
For broader context on how eviction law has changed, see Section 21 ends on 1 May 2026.
#03Which Section 8 grounds UK tenants see most often
Most Section 8 notices are served on one of a handful of grounds. These are the ones worth knowing in detail.
Ground 8 (mandatory): Rent arrears of at least 3 months. This is the most common route to eviction in the UK (LetCompliance, 2026). If you owe three months' rent at both the notice date and the hearing date, the court must grant possession. There is no discretion. If you can reduce your arrears below three months before the hearing, Ground 8 falls away. Some landlords also rely on Grounds 10 and 11 alongside Ground 8 as backup: both are discretionary and cover lesser arrears and persistent late payment respectively.
Ground 14 (discretionary): Antisocial behaviour. This covers behaviour causing nuisance, annoyance, or disturbance to neighbours or people in the locality. Because it is discretionary, the court weighs the severity and frequency of the behaviour. A single incident is rarely enough.
Ground 1 (mandatory): Landlord wants to move back in. Your landlord or a close family member intends to occupy the property as their only or main home. For this ground to be valid, the tenancy agreement must have contained a prior notice that this ground might be used, or the court must consider it just and equitable to dispense with that requirement.
Ground 6 (mandatory): Redevelopment. The landlord intends to substantially redevelop the property and cannot do so while you remain in occupation. A genuine planning permission or structural evidence is usually required.
Ground 17 (mandatory): False statements. If you induced your landlord to grant the tenancy by making a false or misleading statement, this ground applies. It is rare but worth knowing exists.
#04How to check whether a Section 8 notice is actually valid
A significant proportion of Section 8 notices contain errors that make them unenforceable. Landlords often serve notices on outdated forms, state incorrect notice periods, or rely on grounds they cannot actually prove. None of that matters if you do not check.
Here is what to look at:
The form itself. The notice must use the current prescribed form. The Renters' Rights Act 2025 updated the required form, and notices on the old version issued after the commencement date are invalid. If your landlord printed a form from a three-year-old website, that is worth investigating.
The notice period. Different grounds carry different minimum notice periods. Ground 14 (antisocial behaviour), for instance, can require as little as immediately in serious cases. If the notice period stated is shorter than the legal minimum for the ground cited, the notice is defective.
The grounds stated. The notice must clearly state which grounds are being relied on and why. Vague language like 'breach of tenancy' without specifying what breach does not comply with the requirement to particularise the ground.
Service method. Personal delivery, first-class post, and some electronic methods are permitted, but the rules on what counts as valid service matter for calculating when the notice period starts running.
If you spot any of these issues, do not ignore them and hope the landlord drops it. Raise them formally. If you are unsure, Remedy Legal can review your situation and help you identify whether a notice has procedural weaknesses, as part of its instant assessment, with no credit card required.
#05What happens at court if your landlord pursues a possession order
If the notice period expires and your landlord applies to court, you will receive court papers giving a hearing date. You must complete a defence form and return it to the court. If you do not respond, the court may grant possession in your absence.
At the hearing, the judge looks at two things: was the notice valid, and is the ground for possession made out? On a mandatory ground like Ground 8, if both questions are answered yes, the judge must grant possession. The standard order gives you 14 days to leave, though tenants facing exceptional hardship can apply for up to 42 days.
On a discretionary ground, you can argue that even though the ground is technically satisfied, it would not be reasonable to grant possession. Courts consider factors like the length of the tenancy, whether the breach was minor, whether you have since remedied it, and your personal circumstances.
One practical note: if rent arrears are the ground, turning up to court having paid down the arrears below the threshold is one of the most effective things you can do. Courts record this and it changes the arithmetic for Ground 8 immediately.
For detail on how compensation claims can run alongside or separately from possession proceedings, see How to Claim Compensation From Your Landlord in the UK.
#06Section 8 notice rights under the Renters' Rights Act 2025
The Renters' Rights Act 2025 made several changes that directly affect tenants facing Section 8 proceedings.
The rent arrears threshold for mandatory eviction under Ground 8 was raised from two months to three months. This was a deliberate protection against landlords evicting tenants who fell temporarily behind due to a Universal Credit delay or similar short-term income disruption.
New mandatory grounds were added for specific circumstances, including where a landlord wants to sell the property (Ground 1A) and where a family member wants to move in under expanded family definitions. These grounds come with a restriction: a landlord cannot serve notice under them within the first 12 months of a new tenancy. That 12-month protection is worth checking against your tenancy start date if your landlord is using one of these grounds.
The Act also introduced stronger anti-retaliatory eviction protections. If you have complained to your local council about housing conditions or exercised another legal right in the previous six months, and your landlord then serves a Section 8 notice, there is a presumption that the notice is retaliatory. The burden shifts to the landlord to show otherwise.
If your landlord's notice follows a complaint you made, document that timeline precisely. The date of your complaint, the date of any council inspection, and the date of the notice could be the difference between keeping your home and losing it.
The Renters Rights Act 2025: What Tenants Can Claim article covers the broader rights introduced under the Act.
#07How to respond to a Section 8 notice in the next 7 days
Speed matters here. The notice period can be as short as two weeks on some grounds, and you need time to gather evidence, take advice, and prepare a response.
Day 1: Read the notice carefully. Check every field against the checklist above. Note the ground number, the notice period, the form version, and the service date. Calculate when the notice period actually expires.
Day 2: Address any rent arrears if that is the ground. If your landlord is relying on Ground 8, contact your local council's housing benefit team or your Universal Credit work coach the same day. A housing association or Citizens Advice bureau can sometimes arrange emergency rent arrear loans. Get the arrears below three months before the hearing if at all possible.
Day 3: Gather evidence relevant to the ground. If the ground is antisocial behaviour, collect any counter-evidence: witness statements from neighbours, records showing the complaint was isolated, or evidence that your landlord has exaggerated the situation. If the ground is property sale or personal occupation, start looking for evidence of whether this is genuine.
Day 4: Assess the notice for technical defects. If you are not sure, Remedy Legal offers a free instant assessment of your situation. Upload your tenancy agreement and describe the notice you have received, and Remedy's platform will give you a tailored assessment of your position with no jargon.
Day 7: Respond to your landlord in writing. If the notice is defective, state that clearly and in writing, citing the specific defect. Do not just ignore a defective notice and hope it goes away. A written record of your objection matters if the case proceeds to court.
For a step-by-step guide on generating a formal legal letter to your landlord, see How to Generate a Legal Letter to Your Landlord UK.
A Section 8 notice served correctly and on a valid ground is a serious legal document. One served incorrectly, on an inflated ground, or in retaliation for a complaint you made is challengeable. The difference between those two situations often comes down to whether you checked the notice carefully and responded within the window.
If you have received a Section 8 notice and you are not sure whether it is valid, start with Remedy Legal's free instant assessment. Share the details of your situation, and Remedy will give you a clear read on your legal position, identify any procedural weaknesses in the notice, and help you draft a formal response to your landlord if one is needed. No credit card required and no jargon. If your situation needs deeper support, Remedy's no win, no fee tier covers expert document review and strategic guidance at 10% of winnings, charged only if you win. The notice period on your document is already counting down.
Frequently Asked Questions
In this article
What is a Section 8 notice and what does it actually doHow Section 8 grounds are split: mandatory vs discretionaryWhich Section 8 grounds UK tenants see most oftenHow to check whether a Section 8 notice is actually validWhat happens at court if your landlord pursues a possession orderSection 8 notice rights under the Renters' Rights Act 2025How to respond to a Section 8 notice in the next 7 daysFAQ