More than 100,000 households have been threatened with a no-fault eviction in the five years since the then-Conservative government promised to scrap them – with no-fault eviction growing as a cause of homelessness in England.
According to Ministry of Justice figures released on Thursday (8 August), a total of 2,916 households were evicted from their homes through no-fault eviction, also known as a Section 21 eviction, from April to June of 2024 – up from 2,228 during the same timeframe in 2023.
There was also a 9% rise in the number of people served with a no-fault eviction notice from April to June of 2024 compared to the same time last year, up to 8,448.
- Section 21 notice: What is a no-fault eviction? Why are they being scrapped?
- No-fault evictions put households at risk of homelessness over 80,000 times since Tory ban pledge
According to the Renters’ Reform Coalition, the total number of Section 21 claims brought to the courts by landlords since the government pledged to abolish the practice in 2019 now stands at 109,538.
New statutory homelessness statistics from the government also released on Thursday found that 6,630 households were threatened with homelessness after receiving a Section 21 notice, an increase of 1.2% from the same time last year, showing that no-fault evictions are growing as a cause of homeless prevention claims.
Campaigners and experts have slammed the previous Tory government for failing to act on no-fault evictions, explaining that failing to end the practice has led to “record levels of child homelessness”.