This policy applies once the Council has made a decision to commence civil penalty proceedings.
In this policy, the term ‘landlord’ should be read as including letting agents, managing agents, licensors, property owners, corporate landlords, directors of corporate landlords, registered providers of social housing and any other person involved in the letting or management of accommodation.
In this policy, the term ‘corporate landlord’ should be read as referring to a body corporate that meets the definition of ‘landlord’ above.
In this policy, the terms ‘House in Multiple Occupation’ or ‘HMO’ are defined by the Housing Act 2004.
The following breaches are subject to a civil penalty with a statutory maximum of £7,000:
The following breaches are subject to a civil penalty with a statutory maximum of £40,000:
The following offences are subject to a civil penalty with a statutory maximum of £40,000:
If a landlord has committed multiple breaches or offences, a separate civil penalty can, and usually will, be imposed for each breach and offence. In each case, the level of any civil penalty imposed will be determined in accordance with this policy.
If multiple landlords have committed the same breach or offence at the same property, a separate civil penalty can, and usually will, be imposed on each offender. In each case, the level of civil penalty imposed on each offender will be in accordance with this policy.
This policy outlines the Council’s methodology and mechanism for assessing and setting the level of a civil penalty at all stages where a civil penalty is under consideration, including the preparation of a notice of intent, and where a final decision has been made to impose a civil penalty.
When applying the civil penalties matrix, interim calculations at individual stages may result in figures that exceed the statutory maximum. Where the final amount reached following application of all relevant steps exceeds the statutory maximum, the civil penalty will be reduced to the applicable statutory maximum.
The Council considers the need for transparency and consistency to be of primary importance to ensure fairness in the discharge of its functions. The general objective of this policy is, therefore, to promote both transparency and consistency in the imposition of financial penalties so that those involved in the letting or management of accommodation (a) know how the Council will generally penalise relevant breaches and offences and (b) are assured that, generally, like cases will be penalised similarly, and different cases penalised differently.
The Council recognises that, despite its best efforts, landlords may operate unlawfully for a significant period without detection, and that only a proportion of those committing relevant breaches and offences will be identified. Accordingly, the Council seeks to ensure that civil penalties are set at a level that makes it clear to the landlord concerned and to others that operating unlawfully as a landlord is financially disadvantageous when compared to operating lawfully.
The Council has a duty to act fairly, transparently and consistently when assessing civil penalties. To maintain fairness between all landlords, the Council will not give weight to claims advanced as factors that might reduce the amount of a civil penalty unless those claims are supported by evidence that the Council reasonably considers to be relevant, reliable, credible, and sufficient in scope and detail to enable proper assessment of the claim, having regard to the nature of the claim, the information ordinarily available to the landlord, and the need for consistent and fair decision-making. Allowing inadequately evidenced assertions to influence outcomes would risk rewarding those who provide incomplete or misleading information and would create an unfair advantage over landlords who provide a full and properly evidenced account. Accordingly, the Council expects landlords against whom a civil penalty is being considered to provide all documents and records that would ordinarily exist if their account were accurate. Where such evidence is not provided, and no explanation that the Council considers adequate is given, the Council may draw an adverse inference.
Where claims are advanced without sufficient supporting evidence, the Council may request specified supporting material before determining whether to issue a final notice or whether any mitigation has been sufficiently evidenced so as to justify a lower civil penalty.
The further objectives of using financial penalties in particular as a means of enforcing the above breaches and offences are explained below.
The Government has issued statutory guidance entitled “Civil penalties under the Renters' Rights Act 2025 and other housing legislation”. The Council has regard to this guidance in the exercise of their functions in respect of civil penalties.
The Council has considered the following factors in developing this civil penalty policy to help ensure that the civil penalty is set at an appropriate level.
The more serious the breach or offence, the higher the penalty should be.
A higher penalty will be appropriate where the offender has a history of failing to comply with their obligations and/or their actions were deliberate and/or they knew, or ought to have known, that they were in breach of their legal responsibilities.
This is a very important factor when determining the level of penalty. The greater the actual harm or the potential for harm, principally to the tenant but also potentially the local community, the higher the penalty should be.
The penalty should, in a way that is fair, both punish the offender and demonstrate the consequences of not complying with their responsibilities.
The ultimate goal is to prevent any further offending and help ensure that the offender fully complies with all of their legal responsibilities in future. The level of the penalty should therefore be set at a level that it is likely to have a very significant deterrent effect.
While the fact that someone has received a civil penalty may not be in the public domain, the civil penalty policy itself will be and local authorities should consider how their formal enforcement activity can be effectively publicised.
An important part of deterrence is the realisation on the part of landlords that the local housing authority is proactive in levying civil penalties where the need to do so exists and the civil penalty will be set at a high enough level such that operating lawfully will be the sensible financial choice.
The principle here is that it should not be in the offender’s financial interest to commit a breach or offence rather than comply, for example that the penalty for breaching licensing conditions in respect of occupancy of a property is less than the additional rent received as a result of the over-crowding. The absence of any financial benefit to the landlord does not mean though that the penalty should be reduced.
In determining the level of a civil penalty, officers will have regard to the matrix set out below. The matrix consists of the following sequential steps:
The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government has provided statutory guidance that prescribes starting points for all breaches and offences based on the seriousness of the breach or offence. The exception to this prescription is for breaches of licensing conditions under sections 72(3) and 95(2) of the Housing Act 2004, where the Council has determined its own starting levels based on the seriousness of the specific licence condition or type of licence condition that has not be complied with.
While all landlords are expected to comply fully with their legal obligations, the Council considers that a higher standard of professionalism and regulatory awareness is reasonably expected of landlords who operate at greater scale, who have greater experience, or who are involved in more complex forms of letting. Where such landlords fail to comply with their obligations, this will ordinarily justify a higher civil penalty.
In particular, a higher degree of professionalism is expected of landlords who:
An upward adjustment of 20% of the applicable starting point will be applied where the landlord meets any one or more of the following criteria:
A downward adjustment of 20% of the applicable starting point will be applied only where all of the following criteria are met:
To promote fairness and consistency in the administration of civil penalties, the Council will apply a structured and consistent framework when determining the extent to which mitigating and aggravating factors affect the quantum of any civil penalty.
Each breach or offence may have offence-specific mitigating and/or aggravating factors, which will be considered alongside the generic factors set out below.
Where multiple civil penalties are issued under this policy against the same landlord at the same time, and except where expressly stated otherwise, mitigating and aggravating factors will be considered and applied separately to each civil penalty when determining the quantum of each penalty.
The Council may reduce the level of a civil penalty by up to 20% of the applicable starting point to reflect the presence of mitigating factors.
Only in exceptional circumstances may the Council depart from the application of this policy in respect of mitigating factors and apply a reduction in excess of 20%. Exceptional circumstances are rare and unusual and are not established merely by the presence of multiple mitigating factors.
Within the framework of this policy, the Council has not sought to provide an exhaustive list of mitigating factors, recognising that a wide range of circumstances may potentially give rise to mitigation. However, the following generic mitigating factors will be considered in respect of each breach or offence:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Where a landlord relies on a reasonable excuse defence or otherwise contests liability, this mitigating factor will not usually apply.
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
The instruction of a managing or letting agent, or reliance on an agent’s actions or omissions, will not of itself constitute diminished culpability.
The Council may increase the level of a civil penalty by up to 20% of the applicable starting point to reflect the presence of aggravating factors.
Only in exceptional circumstances may the Council depart from the application of this policy in respect of aggravating factors and apply an increase in excess of 20%. Exceptional circumstances are rare and unusual and are not established merely by the presence of multiple aggravating factors.
The following generic aggravating factors will be considered in respect of each breach or offence:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Concurrent investigations or proceedings relating to other civil penalties, prosecutions, or rent repayment orders will not be treated as previous non-compliance.
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Where the Council has prosecuted, or is pursuing a prosecution, in respect of the same act or omission involving failure to provide legally required information (including failure to comply with a statutory notice), that conduct will not also be treated as an aggravating factor for the purposes of setting the civil penalty, in order to avoid double counting. Where multiple civil penalties are imposed against the same landlord at the same time, this aggravating factor will be applied only to the civil penalty with the highest starting point, unless there is a clear and reasoned basis for applying it differently.
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include:
Non-exhaustive examples include children and young adults, persons vulnerable by reason of age, disability or sensory impairment, persons with drug or alcohol dependency, victims of domestic abuse, children in care, persons with complex health needs, persons who do not speak English as a first language, victims of trafficking or sexual exploitation, refugees, asylum seekers, and pregnant women.
The Council will review the quantum of the civil penalty and consider whether it is sufficient to act as an effective deterrent to future non-compliance. Where the Council has evidence that it considers to be sufficiently reliable regarding rental income and/or asset value from the landlord’s, it may determine that an increase in the level of the penalty is appropriate in order to achieve effective deterrence.
It is essential that, as an absolute minimum, landlords do not financially benefit from their offending behaviour.
Financial circumstances will ordinarily be considered after any written representations have been received and as part of the determination of any final notice.
Where a landlord seeks to rely on a strained or limited financial position as a basis for reducing the level of a civil penalty, that position must be supported by appropriate and verifiable evidence sufficient to enable the Council to assess the landlord’s financial position consistently, objectively, and transparently. Unsupported assertions, partial disclosure, or selective provision of information will not be given weight. At a minimum, and where such information exists, the following should be provided as part of any written representations:
Where the Council is not satisfied that it has been provided with sufficiently reliable, complete, and accurate information to assess the landlord’s financial position, the Council may draw the inference that the landlord is able to pay the civil penalty as imposed.
A claimed inability to pay will not, of itself, outweigh the need to ensure effective deterrence or to remove any financial benefit obtained as a result of the breach or offence.
The Council will have regard to the totality principle to ensure that the overall outcome of its enforcement action is just and proportionate. In exceptional cases, and having regard to the particular circumstances of the case, the Council may take account of totality at an earlier stage by deciding not to pursue a civil penalty in respect of a specific breach or offence where doing so would render the overall outcome disproportionate.
In general, however, the application of the totality principle will form the final step in the Council’s decision-making process, undertaken after any written representations have been considered and before final notices are issued, once the level of each individual civil penalty has been assessed in accordance with this policy.
As a final step before issuing final notices, the Council will consider whether multiple civil penalties being imposed under this policy against the same landlord at the same time result in an aggregate amount that is just and proportionate. Where the Council concludes that the aggregate amount would not be just and proportionate, it will consider whether a proportionate reduction of the penalties is appropriate.
The totality principle does not operate across different legal persons who are separately liable in law, nor does it operate across civil penalties imposed at different times. In general, it applies only to multiple civil penalties imposed under this policy on the same person at the same time. Where, however, legislation provides that an officer of a body corporate, or a person concerned in its management, may be separately liable in relation to the same conduct as the body corporate, and that officer also holds a shareholding interest in the body corporate, the Council will, where civil penalties are imposed at the same time on both the body corporate and the officer arising from that same conduct, consider whether the combined outcome results in punitive duplication and is therefore not just and proportionate.
Where a reduction is applied under the totality principle, the Council will ordinarily do so by applying a uniform percentage reduction across all relevant civil penalties being issued at the same time, being those civil penalties that form part of the same totality assessment. Where, however, the application of the totality principle is required to address punitive duplication arising from a shared economic interest between a body corporate and an officer, the Council may apply a differential adjustment to ensure that the overall outcome is just and proportionate.
This approach reflects the statutory guidance on the application of the totality principle and is intended to promote consistency, transparency, and proportionality, while avoiding arbitrary or selective adjustment of individual penalties.
In accordance with the statutory guidance, any rent repayment orders made in respect of the same breach or offence will be disregarded for the purposes of assessing the totality of civil penalties under this policy.
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £35,000 | £40,000 | £28,000 | £35,000 | £42,000 |
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £4,000 | £7,000 | £3,200 | £4,000 | £4,800 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £4,000 | £7,000 | £3,200 | £4,000 | £4,800 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £3,000 | £7,000 | £2,400 | £3,000 | £3,600 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £4,000 | £7,000 | £3,200 | £4,000 | £4,800 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double the starting level for the two constituent breaches added together | £40,000 | Dependent on the constituent breaches | Dependent on the constituent breaches | Dependent on the constituent breaches |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Double the starting level for the two constituent breaches added together | £40,000 | Dependent on the constituent breaches | Dependent on the constituent breaches | Dependent on the constituent breaches |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £30,000 | £40,000 | £24,000 | £30,000 | £36,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £25,000 | £40,000 | £20,000 | £25,000 | £30,000 |
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £35,000 | £40,000 | £28,000 | £35,000 | £42,000 |
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord Type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £6,000 | £7,000 | £4,800 | £6,000 | £7,200 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £3,000 | £7,000 | £2,400 | £3,000 | £3,600 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £4,000 | £7,000 | £3,200 | £4,000 | £4,800 |
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £5,000 | £40,000 | £4,000 | £5,000 | £6,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £12,500 | £40,000 | £10,000 | £12,500 | £15,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £20,000 | £40,000 | £16,000 | £20,000 | £24,000 |
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £25,000 | £40,000 | £20,000 | £25,000 | £30,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £20,000 | £40,000 | £16,000 | £20,000 | £24,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
The Management of Houses in Multiple Occupation (England) Regulations 2006 impose duties on the persons managing HMOs in respect of:
The Licensing and Management of Houses in Multiple Occupation (Additional Provisions) (England) Regulations 2007 impose duties on the persons managing HMOs as defined by Section 257 Housing Act 2004 in respect of:
Where there are multiple breaches of a single Management Regulation at a single HMO, a single civil penalty will be imposed which will cover all the breaches of that Management Regulation.
Where multiple Management Regulations have been breached at a single HMO, a separate civil penalty will be imposed for each Management Regulation that has been breached.
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to provide information to occupier | £3,000 | £40,000 | £2,400 | £3,000 | £3,600 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to take safety measures | £20,000 | £40,000 | £16,000 | £20,000 | £24,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to maintain water supply and drainage | £10,000 | £40,000 | £8,000 | £10,000 | £12,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to supply and maintain gas and electricity | £12,000 | £40,000 | £9,600 | £12,000 | £14,400 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to maintain common parts, fixtures, fittings and appliances | £7,000 | £40,000 | £5,600 | £7,000 | £8,400 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of manager to maintain living accommodation | £7,000 | £40,000 | £5,600 | £7,000 | £8,400 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
| Name of management regulation | Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duty of provide waste disposal facilities | £7,000 | £40,000 | £5,600 | £7,000 | £8,400 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
All granted HMO licences impose a set of conditions on the licence holder. It is important that the licence holder of a licensed property complies with all imposed conditions, but the Council recognises that a failure to comply with certain licence conditions is likely to have a much bigger impact on the safety and comfort of residents than others.
The starting levels for each different type of licence condition breach is set out below based on the seriousness of the offence. Where a licence condition could be interpreted to fall within two different potential starting levels, the higher starting level will be chosen.
Where multiple licence conditions have been breached at a single property, a separate civil penalty will be imposed for each licence condition that has been breached.
Failure to comply with licence conditions related to:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £4,000 | £40,000 | £3,200 | £4,000 | £4,800 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
Failure to comply with licence conditions related to:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £7,000 | £40,000 | £5,600 | £7,000 | £8,400 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
Failure to comply with licence conditions related to:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £12,500 | £40,000 | £10,000 | £12,500 | £15,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
Failure to comply with licence conditions related to:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £20,000 | £40,000 | £16,000 | £20,000 | £24,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
Failure to comply with licence conditions related to:
| Starting point | Statutory maximum civil penalty amount | Landlord type downward adjustment | No landlord type adjustment | Landlord type upward adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| £25,000 | £40,000 | £20,000 | £25,000 | £30,000 |
Offence-specific mitigating factors:
Offence-specific aggravating factors:
Before imposing a civil penalty on a landlord, the Council will give the landlord a notice of intent. The notice of intent will set out:
A landlord who is given a notice of intent may make written representations to the Council about the proposal to impose a civil penalty. Any representations must be made within a period of 28 days beginning with the day after the date on which the notice of intent was given.
After the end of the period for representations the Council will:
A landlord’s rectification of the identified breach or offence during the representations period will rarely, of itself, lead the Council to conclude that the imposition of a civil penalty is inappropriate. However, compliance at that stage will usually be relevant to the assessment of mitigating factors that may reduce the level of any civil penalty imposed.
Similarly, an admission of liability will rarely, of itself, lead the Council to conclude that the imposition of a civil penalty is inappropriate. An admission of liability will, however, usually be relevant to the assessment of mitigating factors that may reduce the level of any civil penalty imposed.
If, following the receipt of written representations and/or the expiry of the time period to make written representations, the Council decides to impose a civil penalty on the landlord, it will give the landlord a final notice imposing that penalty.
The final notice will set out:
Where a civil penalty imposed by a final notice is paid in full within the period specified in that notice (normally 28 days beginning with the day after the final notice is given), the Council will apply a discount of 15% to the amount of the civil penalty.
The availability of the discount is conditional upon full payment being received within the specified period. The discount period will not be extended or suspended by the bringing of an appeal. A landlord who chooses to appeal may still benefit from the discount by paying the civil penalty in full within the specified period; however, where payment is not made within that period, the discount will not apply.
The landlord of an HMO property fails to obtain a licence. They only operate two HMO properties and there are no other relevant factors or aggravating features. The starting point for the offence under the Council’s civil penalties matrix is £17,000.
Following the issue of a notice of intent proposing a civil penalty of £17,000, the landlord makes written representations. Having considered those representations, the Council determines to impose a civil penalty of £16,000, as set out in the final notice.
If the landlord pays the civil penalty in full within the payment period specified in the final notice, a 15% prompt payment discount is applied, resulting in a discounted payment of £13,600.
A landlord who is given a final notice may appeal to the First-tier Tribunal (Property Chamber) against the decision to impose a civil penalty and/or the amount of the civil penalty. Any appeal must be made within 28 days beginning with the day after the date on which the final notice was given.
Where an appeal is brought, the final notice is suspended until the appeal is finally determined or withdrawn.
An appeal to the First-tier Tribunal is by way of a re-hearing of the Council’s decision. In determining an appeal, the Tribunal may have regard to matters of which the Council was unaware at the time the decision to impose the civil penalty was made.
The Tribunal may dismiss an appeal if it is satisfied that the appeal is frivolous, vexatious, an abuse of process, or has no reasonable prospect of success.
The First-tier Tribunal may invite the parties to consider mediation or another form of alternative dispute resolution. The Council will not generally agree to mediation in relation to the level of a civil penalty, as civil penalties are determined by reference to this Policy to promote fair, consistent, and proportionate outcomes. Agreeing reductions outside the Policy framework would risk undermining consistency and the Council’s enforcement objectives.
On determination of an appeal, the Tribunal may:
Where the Tribunal varies a civil penalty by increasing its amount, it may do so only up to the applicable statutory maximum for the relevant breach or offence (£7,000 or £40,000, as applicable).
A party to the appeal may apply for permission to appeal the decision of the First-tier Tribunal to the Upper Tribunal (Lands Chamber).