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OTHER GUIDES & TIPS

How Do Tenant and Landlord Rights Vary Around Europe?

When moving abroad, many people weigh up the pros and cons of renting or purchasing their own property. 

In its new survey, Your Overseas Home discovered that around a fifth of those moving abroad were planning to rent before buying. Then there are the ‘digital nomads’, those who are able to work from a laptop anywhere, and so choose to rent in a variety of locations around the world.

But, how does renting work across Europe? 

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Every country, and sometimes even each individual city, can have different laws for renting, for both tenants and landlords. 

Christopher Nye, senior content editor at Your Overseas Home, says: “There are over 4.6 million people renting privately in the UK and with there being a shortage of rental properties on the market across the country, renting in the UK is seeming more difficult by the day. 

“If you’re looking to move abroad and aren’t in the position to purchase your own property right away, renting is an ideal option. Across Europe, renting laws vary from what we’re used to here in the UK, and you may find yourself living more comfortably in a rental abroad than a rental in the UK.”

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Germany - Prepare to pay 

If you’re planning on renting in Germany, prepare to empty your pockets when work needs doing to the rental property you’re living on, or when you’re looking to hand back the keys. Across Germany, it’s common practice for tenants to be expected to fix any ‘wear and tear’ issues before they vacate the property. 

Romania - Evictions without grounds    

Across Romania, eviction rights, alongside renting rights, fall in favour of landlords. If your landlord wants the property back or wants to evict you, they can do so without grounds. Also, landlords can complete evictions with no minimum period of occupation and no rental limits. 

Monaco - Pay a large deposit 

If you’re looking to rent in Monaco, you should be prepared to part with a large sum of money before you begin living in a new rental property. It’s the norm to be asked to pay up to three months rent for your deposit. For UK residents who are used to paying a single month's rent upfront as their deposit, this might come as a shock to the system!

 

Denmark - You could live there forever 

If you’re renting in Denmark and think you’ve found your forever home in a rental property, it may well be able to become your forever home! The landlord can only make you move out if you’ve actually done something wrong or if the property needs major work done. Following this, if the landlord does choose to evict you, they still need to provide you with three months notice. Furthermore, if they’re looking to move into the property themselves, they need to provide you with a year's notice. 

France - You’ll never have to move during the winter

Moving during the winter months is always difficult and far from ideal, and of course, being evicted during the winter months isn’t a pleasant experience. However, in France, it’s the law to ensure that no evictions will be made during the winter months. From November 1 to March 31 you don’t have to worry about having to find a new rental property. 

Sweden - Don’t be a bad landlord 

In Sweden, as a landlord you want to ensure that you’re sticking to the books as much as possible and doing right by your tenants. So much so, if you’re a poor landlord who goes against regulations, you can actually be placed on a landlord ‘blacklist’. This blacklist is published each year and prospective tenants will make sure to avoid any landlords on this list, for their own rental protection. 

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    I think you have to look at how the different systems came about in these countries.

    I believe that the decision to abolish shorthold assured tenancies came as a result of a comparison with the German model so it is worth considering the history of that housing system.

    Germany was a divided country for many years after the end of the Second World War. Half of the country was a Communist dictatorship where the State had the sole right to allocate homes. There was no free housing market; before being able to establish a tenancy agreement, a would-be tenant needed housing allocation.

    In 1930s Germany the Nazis were in power. They acted ruthlessly, particularly in relation to Jewish people's property. Jewish people had to register all assets under a scheme set up. They were subject to confiscatory taxation.

    In 1936, the Nazis implemented a rent freeze, and today rent controls place strong restrictions on in-tenancy rent increases. Tenancies are indefinite in length. Landlords have few rights over their properties.

    So Germany has a very authoritarian history and it is rather odd that we should want to emulate a system which evolved from the policies of dictatorships.

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    If anyone is interested in a 2017 report recommending the German system it is entitled:

    "Lessons from Germany: Tenant power in the rental market"

    It comes from the Progressive Policy Think Tank which was formed by Clive Hollick - a supporter of the Labour Party - and John Eatwell - a former senior adviser to the Labour Party.

     
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    We should have a tenant blacklist.

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    Yes we should John, but that will never be allowed to happen

     
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    I don’t see why a tenant list is any less or more acceptable than a landlord list. Are we still a democracy in Britain or have I blinked.

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    We've not been a domocracy for some time now

     
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    It is evident we are the same as Germany in the nineteen thirties
    As a landlord in Britain we and our families have the same property rights as Jewish families in Nazi Germany

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    Yes I was thinking exactly the same

     
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    The upcoming legislation will mean that all landlords will be legally required to register themselves and their properties on the Property Portal and could be subject to penalties if they market or let out a property without registering it and providing the required information.

    And we are not being given any say at all in the new legislation.

     
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    I don’t know why they want to compare with other Europeans Countries. We came out of Europe.

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    I suppose because many of us are selling our UK properties and buying properties in countries where we are treated the same as other businesses and do not suffer the discrimination injustice and hate crime that we suffer in the UK
    It is also only fair that tenants who are losing their homes are told the truth as to why they are being evicted after all it is not A NO FAULT EVICTION it is clearly an AT FAULT EVICTION it is the fault of the housing charities and the government

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    At the moment we are able to sell our properties and that is very important. We can all sell everything and go to Rumania! So there is still hope.

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    We would have more rights in Russia than the UK

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    I don’t know why landlords should be required to Register.
    We are Registered so many times already it’s over kill.
    All my Properties are licensed and some have been licensed and re- licensed 4 times,
    Why should we be further licensed / Sanctioned, do they not know who we are and we keeping the lot of them, we have more admin than McAlpine, and the Deposit Schemes another mechanism for Government instant database on-line and you want more.

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