More than a dozen landlords applying to court to evict tenants in High Peak

More than a dozen landlords applied to court for possession orders to remove tenants refusing to follow eviction orders in High Peak, new figures show.

These claims are made after an eviction has been served, and the tenants have not left by the end of the notice period. They can result in a county court bailiff repossessing the house.

Ministry of Justice figures covering January to March show there were 14 landlord possession claims made to remove tenants in High Peak – down slightly from 15 in the first three months of 2024.

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Of the recent claims, three were made by social landlords, five by private landlords, and six were accelerated claims after 'no-fault' evictions.

Shelter said no-fault evictions, which accounted for about 40% of the landlord repossession by court bailiff this recent quarter, should be scrapped by summer.placeholder image
Shelter said no-fault evictions, which accounted for about 40% of the landlord repossession by court bailiff this recent quarter, should be scrapped by summer.

Across England and Wales, there were 23,976 landlord possession claims – down 4% from a year earlier.

And there were 7,308 court orders for repossession of a landlord's home by a county court bailiff – a 5% increase. This included two bailiff evictions of tenants in High Peak.

Shelter said no-fault evictions, which accounted for about 40% of the landlord repossession by court bailiff this recent quarter, should be scrapped by summer.

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Alicia Walker, assistant director of advocacy and activism at Shelter, said: "Thousands of renters are being marched out of their homes because of an unjust policy that should already be history.

"Rents and living costs are spiralling across England and tenants on the lowest pay are keeping hold of their homes by the skin of their teeth.

"Every day our frontline teams hear from families who've been hit with rent increases they just cannot afford - forced to pay up or ship out, with little standing between them and the nightmare of homelessness."

A Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government spokesperson said: "We have inherited a serious housing crisis which is why our Plan for Change will deliver seismic reforms alongside our mission to build 1.5 million new homes.

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"Our Renters' Rights Bill will deliver a long overdue transformation of private renting by strengthening tenants' rights and security and banning section 21 'no fault' evictions."

They added: "While mortgage arrears are reducing and homeowner repossession levels are well below those seen in previous decades, we understand the concerns of mortgage holders and there are significant safeguards in place to support those who are struggling."

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