Electrical advice
Landlord electrical safety certificate
20 Aug 2021 • 6 minutes
From 1st April 2021, landlords have been required by law to arrange an electrical safety inspection for all private rented properties. We’ve put together a simple guide that tells you how to meet the guidelines if you’re a private landlord, and how to go about obtaining an electrical safety certificate for your rented property.
On 1st June 2020, the electrical regulations for private landlords in England were updated. From this point landlords were required to have all electrical installations in their rented properties inspected by a qualified electrician to make sure that they are safe. The resulting electrical safety certificate is now required by law for each private rental property in England.
The regulations were made law in a staggered process; they were first introduced for new tenancies, with a requirement for electrical installations to be checked and tested before the start of any new tenancy.
The next milestone was 1st April 2021 when the regulations were updated to include existing tenancies. This means electrical inspections are now required for all private tenancies and that they must be carried out and certified by a qualified electrician.
Electrical accidents in the home can be fatal. If you rented out a property with faulty wiring to tenants and it happened to injure or kill one of them, you as the landlord could be held liable. For your own peace of mind, as well as your tenants’, you need to be certain that you’re providing a safe living environment and that you’re also covered against any legal action. A thorough inspection of your property’s electrical circuits and a clean bill of health means you can rent out your property for the next few years knowing you’ve done everything in your power to ensure accidents are kept at bay.
Electrical inspections must be carried out every five years as a minimum, to ensure the safety of private tenants.
If a landlord is found to be non-compliant with the new law or if it’s been found that they’ve made no attempt to complete necessary remedial works identified by the inspection, the landlord could face a penalty fine of up to £30,000, which shows the seriousness of the electrical safety guidelines.
The qualified electrician carrying out your inspection will be searching for any inadequate earthing or bonding. They’ll seek to identify any defective or faulty electrical work in the property and also check if installations are overloaded.
They’ll be checking things such as:
The electrician can make any immediate hazards safe before they leave your property. The inspecting electrician won’t check the safety of portable electrical appliances, such as white goods, kettles, toasters or TVs, unless you also ask them to do a portable appliance (PAT) test.
No, PAT testing is not a legal requirement for landlords, but we highly recommend asking your electrician to add PAT testing, especially if you’ve provided items including the above as part of a fully furnished rental property. This is a great way to ensure you’re doing everything you can to keep your tenants, your property and yourself safe.
The electrician must give you a copy of their report, providing the results of the inspection. It’ll also let you know if any work is required and will give you a date for your property’s next set of checks.
If the inspecting electrician suggests that repairs, improvements or further inspections are required, the work must be completed within 28 days – however, they can request a shorter period depending on the type of fault that’s reported.
If the local authority or your tenants request a copy of the report at any time, you as the landlord must provide this to them within 28 days.
Yes. The regulations absolutely require a copy of the electrical safety certificate to be supplied to all new and existing tenants as proof that a qualified electrical inspector has found the property’s electrical circuits to be safe and in good working order.
It’s important to make sure that your property’s electrical safety inspection is carried out by a contractor who is a member of a electrician’s Competent Persons Scheme (CPS) or who has signed a checklist confirming they’re skilled enough to carry out the required checks.
A landlord electrical safety certificate can cost from £100 to £230 for a flat, or £150 to £300+ for a house, depending on its size.
It takes an electrician around 2-4 hours to check all wiring, but of course this will vary depending on the size of your property.
It’s not just your electrics that you need to make sure are safe, you must get your relevant gas appliances inspected too – that’s where the CP12 or more recently known Gas Safety Certificate comes in. There’s no difference between the two. The document used to be called CP12, which stands for ‘Corgi Proforma 12’ and refers to when CORGI was the regulatory body for UK gas engineers. In 2009 the document was renamed the Landlord Gas Safety Certificate to give it a more generic title.
You may find that gas engineers who’ve been in the trade a long time use both terms, although as with anything, over time, CP12 will be a name that’s gradually phased out.
A CP12, or Landlord Gas Safety Certificate is a similar document to the electrical safety certificate, but relates to a gas safety inspection carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer.
The record is issued to prove that a landlord has met their legal obligation to have safety checks carried out on all of the gas appliances in their rented property. If poorly installed and maintained, gas appliances can be as dangerous as faulty electrical wiring, and could potentially produce the highly poisonous Carbon Monoxide gas, which is why it’s so important to get a qualified engineer to check them at least once a year.
Failing to get a CP12 or landlord Gas Safety Certificate for your rented property could result in a hefty fine and even up to 6 months’ jail time.
We help thousands of buy-to-let landlords and more experienced landlords with multiple rental properties protect themselves and their tenants against the inconvenience and potential costs of unexpected electrical faults and gas boiler breakdowns. Check out our landlord Insurance comparison tables for more details on the levels of cover we provide, which range from electrics Insurance to our most comprehensive Plumbing, Heating and Electrics cover.
Yes. From April 2021 landlords are legally required to provide an electrical safety certificate to all new and existing tenants.
A landlord electrical safety certificate can cost from £100 to £230 for a flat, or £150 to £300+ for a house, depending on the size.
Every 5 years.
It takes an electrician around 2-4 hours to check all wiring, depending on the size of your property.
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