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BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Becoming a Landlord: Checklist Guide

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Essential checklist for first-time landlords in 7 countries. Licences, safety checks, insurance, and legal obligations covered. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps with docs. New landlords often underestimate two things: the volume of paperwork required before letting, and the ongoing compliance obligations that continue throughout the tenancy. This checklist addresses the pre-letting phase. For ongoing obligations, see our guide on Landlord Obligations: Legal Basics.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. Country-by-Country Registration Requirements
  3. Pre-Letting Safety Checklist
  4. Insurance
  5. Financial and Tax Preparation
  6. Tenancy Documentation Checklist
  7. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  8. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Before you rent out your first property, you need to register, insure, inspect, and document — across all seven countries, new landlords face significant legal obligations that must be met before any tenant moves in.

Becoming a landlord can be financially rewarding, but it is not passive income from day one. Every country covered by MmowW Scrib🐮 imposes pre-letting obligations on landlords — from safety certificates to licensing requirements to tenancy registration. Missing these steps can result in fines, invalid leases, and personal liability.

This guide covers the essential checklist for becoming a private residential landlord in the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the USA.

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice.

What You Need to Know

New landlords often underestimate two things: the volume of paperwork required before letting, and the ongoing compliance obligations that continue throughout the tenancy. This checklist addresses the pre-letting phase. For ongoing obligations, see our guide on Landlord Obligations: Legal Basics.

The key pre-letting categories are:

  1. Registration and licensing
  2. Property safety compliance
  3. Insurance
  4. Financial and tax preparation
  5. Tenancy documentation

Country-by-Country Registration Requirements

Country Registration Required? Key Body Penalty for Non-Registration
🇬🇧 UK HMO licence if 3+ unrelated tenants; landlord registration in Scotland and Wales Local authority (HMO); Rent Smart Wales; Scottish landlord register Up to £30,000 fine (England HMOs); criminal conviction (Wales/Scotland)
🇫🇷 France SIRET number required if operating as business; Paris requires room count declaration INPI / local mairie Tax and business compliance risk
🇸🇪 Sweden No formal registration for single property; tax declaration required Skatteverket Tax penalties
🇦🇺 Australia No national registration; state property managers may need licence if managing for others State consumer affairs bodies N/A for own property
🇳🇿 New Zealand Healthy Homes Standards compliance required; no registration per se Tenancy Services (MBIE) Up to NZ$7,200 per breach
🇨🇦 Canada Toronto: mandatory landlord licensing; varies by municipality Municipal licensing offices Municipal fines
🇺🇸 USA Many cities require rental property registration City/county housing department Fines; inability to collect rent

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Pre-Letting Safety Checklist

UK Safety Requirements

Before a tenant moves in, UK landlords must provide:

Australia/New Zealand: Healthy Homes Standards (NZ)

New Zealand's Healthy Homes Standards (from 2021) require rental properties to meet minimum standards for:

France: DPE and Décence

In France:

USA/Canada: Local Codes

In the USA and Canada, habitability requirements are set at state/provincial and municipal level. Before letting, arrange:

Insurance

Before your first tenant moves in, arrange:

Buildings Insurance

Your standard homeowner's insurance may not cover a rental property. Inform your insurer that the property will be let. You will likely need:

Contents Insurance (If Furnished)

If you are letting the property furnished, arrange landlord contents insurance covering the furniture and appliances you own in the property.

Financial and Tax Preparation

Set Up a Separate Bank Account

Keep rental income and expenses completely separate from personal finances. This simplifies tax returns and provides a clear record if disputes arise.

Understand Your Tax Obligations

Rental income is taxable in all seven countries. Key considerations:

Consult a tax professional in your jurisdiction before letting.

Tenancy Documentation Checklist

Before the tenancy begins, prepare and sign:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Letting before obtaining safety certificates — in the UK, letting without a gas safety certificate is a criminal offence
  2. Using a template tenancy agreement from the internet — jurisdiction-specific requirements vary; outdated templates can result in invalid clauses
  3. Not conducting a Right to Rent check (UK) — fines of up to £20,000 per tenant
  4. Failing to register the deposit (UK) — the tenant can claim up to 3× the deposit as a penalty; you cannot serve a valid Section 21 notice
  5. Underinsuring the property — inform your insurer of the tenancy; failure to do so can void claims

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Use MmowW Scrib🐮's tools to manage your documentation:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified solicitor, landlord association, or property professional.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Do I need a licence to let a single property?

A: In England and Wales, a single self-contained property let to one household generally does not require a licence (unless it is an HMO — three or more unrelated tenants sharing facilities). Scotland and Wales have mandatory landlord registration. In some cities (Toronto, parts of the USA), local licensing applies even to single units. Always check with your local authority.

Q: Can I manage the property myself, or do I need an agent?

A: You can manage yourself. Using an agent provides professional management but costs 8–15% of monthly rent. If you manage yourself, you take on all legal compliance responsibilities directly. Many landlords self-manage successfully with good organisation and appropriate documentation tools.

Q: How do I know what tenancy agreement to use?

A: Each jurisdiction has specific requirements for tenancy agreements. In the UK, an Assured Shorthold Tenancy (AST) agreement is standard. In France, the lease must follow prescribed formats under the Loi ALUR. In New Zealand and Australia, standardised forms are available from state/territory housing bodies. MmowW Scrib🐮 can help with document preparation for the jurisdiction you need.

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Important disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For legal questions, consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction.
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