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No Heating or Hot Water in Rented Property — UK Housing Disrepair Guidance

Lack of heating or hot water can significantly affect safety and habitability. If the issue has persisted and repairs have not been completed within a reasonable timeframe, you may be entitled to remedies in appropriate circumstances.

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Heating & Hot Water Failures in Rented Property

Heating systems, boilers and hot water provision are fundamental services in most tenancies. An assessment considers how long the issue has persisted, whether it affects the entire property, the time of year, and whether the landlord was notified and given an opportunity to complete repairs.

Common issues: broken boiler, no radiators working, no hot water, repeated temporary fixes
Helpful evidence: repair requests, engineer reports, dated communications, photos of system faults

This page provides general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For a broader eligibility review, visit the Housing Disrepair Assessment.

Landlord Responsibility for Heating and Hot Water

In UK rented accommodation, landlords are generally responsible for keeping installations for space heating and hot water in repair and proper working order. This includes boilers, immersion heaters, radiators, pipework, and control systems.

Where a heating system fails due to age, poor maintenance, or component breakdown, responsibility will usually rest with the landlord rather than the tenant.

Urgency and Reasonable Repair Timeframes

Loss of heating or hot water is often treated as urgent — particularly during colder months or where children or vulnerable occupants are present.

Assessment focuses on:

  • Date landlord was notified
  • Inspection response time
  • Whether interim solutions were offered
  • Total duration without functioning system

Prolonged inaction or repeated failed repairs can significantly strengthen eligibility.

Interaction with Damp and Mould Issues

Heating failure frequently contributes to condensation build-up and mould growth. When a property cannot be heated adequately, moisture levels rise, particularly in winter.

Where damp and mould coexist with heating defects, the matters should be assessed together rather than in isolation.

Related guidance: Damp & Mould

Evidence That Strengthens a Heating or Hot Water Case

  • Written repair notifications
  • Engineer or contractor reports
  • Boiler fault codes or photos
  • Records of missed appointments
  • Notes showing length of outage

A documented timeline showing persistent failure after notice materially improves assessment outcomes.

Begin a Confidential Assessment

Heating and hot water enquiries are reviewed using the same structured housing disrepair criteria. Submit your information securely via the main assessment.

This platform provides a structured case assessment process. No automated legal advice is provided.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is no heating or hot water considered housing disrepair?

Heating and hot water systems are generally core services within rented accommodation. Persistent failure, particularly during colder months, may be relevant to a housing disrepair assessment depending on the circumstances.

How long must heating be broken before it becomes serious?

There is no fixed timeframe. The seriousness depends on factors such as time of year, vulnerability of occupants, and whether the landlord has been notified and had a reasonable opportunity to complete repairs.

What evidence should I gather?

Helpful evidence may include dated messages to the landlord or agent, repair reports, photographs of faulty systems, and records showing how long the issue has persisted.

Does this page provide legal advice?

No. This page provides general information only. A structured assessment determines whether a matter may meet eligibility criteria.