What Is Rent Deposit Compensation?
The Housing Act 2004 and Localism Act 2011 place two clear legal obligations on landlords who take a deposit from an assured shorthold tenant. Both must be completed within 30 days of receiving the deposit:
- Protect the deposit in one of three government-approved Tenancy Deposit Protection schemes — the Deposit Protection Service (DPS), MyDeposits, or the Tenancy Deposit Scheme (TDS).
- Give the tenant written Prescribed Information setting out where the deposit is held, how to reclaim it, and what to do if there is a dispute.
Failing either obligation — or doing either late, incorrectly, or incompletely — entitles the tenant to a court-ordered penalty of between 1 and 3 times the full deposit amount, plus the return of the deposit itself.
Example: A £2,000 deposit that was never protected, with no Prescribed Information served, could result in a court award of up to £6,000 in penalties — plus the £2,000 deposit returned. Total recovery: up to £8,000.
The Three Government-Approved Schemes
Your landlord was legally required to use one of these three schemes. We check all three registers as part of your free initial assessment:
What Is Prescribed Information?
Even where a landlord protected the deposit, they were also required to give the tenant specific written information within the same 30-day window. This must include:
- The name and contact details of the TDP scheme holding the deposit
- How to apply to have the deposit released at the end of the tenancy
- What to do if there is a dispute about deductions
- The landlord's name and contact address
Providing this information late, inaccurately, or incompletely is a separate breach — even if the deposit was protected on time.
Six Situations That Give Rise to a Claim
Deposit never protected
Never registered with any scheme. The most common breach — and typically results in the highest penalty award.
Protected after 30 days
Even a single day late constitutes a breach. Many landlords register deposits weeks or months after receiving them.
Wrong scheme or wrong details
Registered in the wrong name, under incorrect details, or with a different scheme to the one described to the tenant.
No Prescribed Information given
The deposit was protected but the tenant was never provided with the required written information.
Incomplete or inaccurate information
Information was provided but it was missing required elements or contained errors.
Failure on tenancy renewal
The obligation resets on each new or renewed tenancy period. Many landlords miss this for later periods.
How Much Could You Claim?
courts can award
to protect
for claims
The court awards between 1 and 3 times the deposit based on the severity of the breach, whether it was deliberate, and the landlord's behaviour throughout. A landlord who never protected a deposit at all typically faces the highest awards.
Key Facts About Deposit Claims
- You can claim after leaving the property — the right does not expire when the tenancy ends
- You can claim even if your deposit was returned to you in full
- You do not need to have complained to your landlord before making a claim
- Nationality, student status, and immigration status do not affect your right to claim
- If you shared the tenancy, you and your co-tenants can often bring the claim together
- Your landlord cannot legally retaliate against you for making a claim