If you agreed to rent your home for a fixed period such as 12 months, you’ll need to decide what you want to do when it ends.
Options for when the tenancy ends are to:
Your landlord has to give you written notice to leave if they don’t want you to stay on.
Your landlord may offer you a new fixed-term agreement or you can ask for one. If you sign a new fixed term tenancy agreement, you have to pay the rent until the end of the new fixed term.
You can’t end a fixed-term tenancy early unless:
Your landlord or letting agent may ask you to pay a fee to renew your contract. You can try to negotiate to reduce or cancel this. Some landlords want long term tenants. Consider asking for a longer-term tenancy if you’d like to stay on for 2 years or more.
You don’t have to leave when your fixed-term agreement ends. If you stay on and don’t sign a new contract, your tenancy automatically becomes a periodic tenancy. This is also known as a rolling agreement. Periodic tenancies continue rolling on from month to month or from week to week, depending on how often your rent is paid. To end a month-to-month tenancy, you need to give at least 28 days’ or a month’s notice.
You must end your tenancy correctly if you decide you want to move out at the end of the fixed term.
Your landlord must give you notice if they want you to leave at the end of a fixed term tenancy. If you have an assured shorthold tenancy, you should get at least two months’ written notice. Your landlord will normally use a section 21 notice.
At the end of your fixed term, your landlord can increase the rent if you agree to stay for a further fixed term. If you refuse to accept the rent increase, your landlord can give you notice to leave. Your landlord could rent to another tenant at the higher rent. You can ask your landlord if they’ll accept a lower increase in return for not having to re-let the property.