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

Lease Renewal: Tenant Rights and Process Guide

TS行政書士
Fachlich geprüft von Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Zugelassener Verwaltungsberater, JapanAlle MmowW-Inhalte werden von einem staatlich lizenzierten Experten für Regulierungskonformität betreut.
Know your lease renewal rights as a tenant. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps tenants understand automatic renewals, rent increase negotiations, and tenancy continuation rules across 7 countries. The expiry of a fixed-term tenancy is not automatically the end of your right to occupy. In the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, residential tenancies come with significant security of tenure — meaning landlords cannot reclaim possession simply because the fixed term has ended without serving valid.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: When a fixed-term tenancy ends, tenants in most jurisdictions have the right to remain — either through automatic renewal or by rolling to a periodic tenancy. Landlords cannot simply end the tenancy at the fixed term without following a proper process.

What You Need to Know

The expiry of a fixed-term tenancy is not automatically the end of your right to occupy. In the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, and Canada, residential tenancies come with significant security of tenure — meaning landlords cannot reclaim possession simply because the fixed term has ended without serving valid notice and, in most cases, obtaining a court or tribunal order.

This security is valuable. It prevents landlords from using the fixed-term expiry to evict tenants without cause, force arbitrary rent increases, or create uncertainty. At the same time, tenants do have choices at renewal — renewing on a new fixed term, rolling to a periodic tenancy, or giving notice to leave.

Understanding what happens at the end of your fixed term, and what your options are, helps you plan your housing future with confidence.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

What Happens When a Fixed Term Expires?

At the end of a fixed-term tenancy, three things can happen:

  1. You sign a new fixed-term agreement. This resets the tenancy for another fixed period (typically 6 or 12 months). Rent may be renegotiated. New deposit protection requirements apply if terms change.
  2. The tenancy rolls to a periodic tenancy. In most jurisdictions, if no new agreement is signed and neither party serves notice, the tenancy automatically becomes periodic (rolling month-to-month or week-to-week). The terms of the original tenancy continue — including the rent — until properly varied.
  3. The tenancy ends. This requires a valid notice to have been served before the end of the fixed term by either the landlord or the tenant.

In most jurisdictions, the landlord cannot simply assume the tenant will leave at the end of the fixed term. You have the right to remain until properly served with a valid notice and, if you challenge the possession claim, a court or tribunal order.

The Periodic Tenancy

A periodic tenancy is often an underappreciated right. It gives the tenant ongoing flexibility — you can give relatively short notice to leave (typically 1 month) — while also requiring the landlord to follow the full notice and possession process to regain the property.

In the UK, a private residential tenancy (under the Housing Act 1988) becomes a Statutory Periodic Tenancy automatically at the end of the fixed term if the parties take no further action. The same deposit protection rules apply; the landlord must serve a new prescribed information notice if the scheme has changed.

In Australia, a fixed-term tenancy automatically becomes a periodic tenancy on expiry if the landlord does not give notice to end and the tenant continues to occupy and pay rent.

Rent on Renewal

Renewal is often the moment landlords seek to increase the rent. As a tenant, you have several options:

Never assume you must accept a proposed rent increase without negotiation.

Giving Notice to Leave at Renewal

If you decide not to renew, you must give proper notice. In most jurisdictions, in a periodic tenancy, the tenant must give at least one month's notice (aligned to the rent period). In France, the notice period for an unfurnished tenancy is three months (or one month in certain circumstances — e.g., job loss, health reasons, move to social housing).

Serve notice in writing, confirm the date, and keep a copy.

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Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Fixed Term Expiry What Happens? Landlord Notice to End Tenant Notice to End Key Source
🇬🇧 UK AST continues as SPT Periodic auto-rollover Section 21 (2 months) or Section 8 1 month gov.uk/private-renting/your-rights-and-responsibilities
🇫🇷 France Lease renews unless notice given Auto-renewal (same term) 6 months (unfurnished) 3 months (unfurnished) service-public.fr
🇸🇪 Sweden Tenancy continues unless notice Periodic rollover 3 months 3 months hyresnamnden.se
🇦🇺 Australia Becomes periodic (state-specific) Periodic auto-rollover 30–90 days (state-specific) 14–28 days tenants.org.au
🇳🇿 New Zealand Becomes periodic Periodic auto-rollover 63 days (end of fixed term notice) 21 days tenancy.govt.nz
🇨🇦 Canada Varies by province Usually periodic rollover 60 days (Ontario) 60 days tribunalsontario.ca/ltb
🇺🇸 USA State-specific State-specific 30–60 days (state-specific) 30 days (typically) hud.gov

UK note: The Renters (Reform) Bill (expected to become law) proposes abolishing fixed-term tenancies in England, replacing them with periodic tenancies from the start. This will significantly change the renewal landscape. Monitor developments.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Assuming you must leave when the fixed term ends. In most jurisdictions, your right to occupy continues. If you want to stay and the landlord has not served a valid notice, you can simply remain — the tenancy will roll over.
  2. Signing a new fixed-term agreement that removes a beneficial break clause. If your original lease had a break clause and the renewal does not, you have lost flexibility. Check the renewal terms carefully.
  3. Not negotiating the rent on renewal. Renewal is a natural negotiating point. Don't simply accept whatever rent is proposed. Research comparable rents and make a counter-proposal if the proposed increase is above market.
  4. Not giving notice in the correct form. Notice to end a tenancy must usually be in writing and served in accordance with the lease terms. An informal text message or email saying "I'm leaving next month" may not be a valid notice to quit in every jurisdiction.
  5. Being pressured into signing a new fixed term before you are ready. Landlords and agents sometimes pressure tenants to sign quickly to avoid an "awkward" rollover period. You are under no obligation to sign a new fixed-term agreement on the landlord's timetable. Take time to read and consider the renewal terms.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Prepare your lease renewal and notice documentation:

MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice on specific renewal terms, consult a qualified housing solicitor or attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: If the landlord offers a new lease with a higher rent, must I accept it or leave?

A: Neither — you can negotiate, remain on a periodic tenancy at the current rent (until the landlord follows the proper rent increase process), or give notice to leave. The landlord cannot force you to sign a new fixed-term agreement on pain of eviction unless they have grounds to seek possession through the proper legal process.

Q: Can the landlord refuse to renew my tenancy?

A: Yes, in many jurisdictions a landlord can choose not to renew and regain possession — but only by following the proper legal process. In England, this currently means serving a Section 21 notice with at least two months' notice. In France and Sweden, the landlord must have valid grounds (sale of property, own use, serious breach by tenant) to refuse renewal of an unfurnished tenancy.

Q: Do I need to sign a new tenancy agreement if I want to stay on a periodic basis?

A: No. A periodic tenancy operates under the terms of the original agreement without any new document needing to be signed. However, if the landlord proposes a new fixed-term agreement with different terms, you should read it carefully — you are not obliged to sign it simply because you want to continue renting.

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