MmowWScribe Blog › shared-housing-lease-guide
BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Shared Housing Lease Guide for Tenants

TS行政書士
Supervisado por Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (行政書士) — Escribano Administrativo Autorizado, JapónTodo el contenido de MmowW está supervisado por un experto en cumplimiento normativo con licencia nacional.
Navigate shared housing leases in 7 countries. Understand joint tenancy, individual liability, and housemate rights. MmowW Scrib🐮 helps with documentation. Shared housing typically takes one of two legal forms:
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. Country-by-Country Overview
  3. Before You Sign: Key Questions
  4. When a Housemate Stops Paying
  5. Adding or Replacing Housemates
  6. House Rules and Housemate Agreements
  7. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  8. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  9. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: In a joint tenancy, every housemate is equally responsible for the full rent — not just their share. Understanding your legal structure before signing is the single most important step in shared housing.

Shared housing is common among students, young professionals, and anyone looking to reduce costs in expensive cities. But sharing a home means sharing legal obligations — sometimes in ways that can seriously affect your finances if a housemate stops paying rent, causes damage, or leaves unexpectedly.

This guide explains how shared housing leases work 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

Shared housing typically takes one of two legal forms:

Joint Tenancy

All tenants sign a single lease together. Key features:

Individual Tenancies (Room-by-Room)

Each tenant signs a separate lease for their own room. Key features:

Most landlords offering shared housing prefer joint tenancies because they are easier to enforce. Many students, in particular, find themselves in joint tenancies without fully understanding the implications.

Country-by-Country Overview

Country Common Structure Deposit Handling Legal Framework
🇬🇧 UK Joint tenancy most common in private sector Single deposit split informally; protected in one TDP scheme Housing Act 1988; Tenant Fees Act 2019
🇫🇷 France Colocation — can be joint (bail solidaire) or individual rooms Each tenant may pay their own deposit; landlord must protect Loi ALUR 2014 regulates colocation; bail solidaire
🇸🇪 Sweden Individual contracts per room more common in student housing; joint in private Varies Jordabalken; Hyreslagen
🇦🇺 Australia Joint tenancy common; some individual room leases Single bond lodged with bond authority State Residential Tenancy Acts
🇳🇿 New Zealand Joint or individual; varies by landlord Bond lodged with Tenancy Services Residential Tenancies Act 1986
🇨🇦 Canada Joint tenancy or individual rooms; province-specific Province-specific rules Provincial landlord-tenant legislation
🇺🇸 USA Joint tenancy common in shared apartments State-specific; varies significantly State and local tenancy law

Sources:

Use our free tool: Cost Calculator

Try it free →

Before You Sign: Key Questions

1. Who Is on the Lease?

Confirm that all housemates are named on the lease. In a joint tenancy, any housemate not on the lease is technically a guest — they have no legal right to the property but also bear no legal obligation to the landlord.

2. What Happens If Someone Leaves?

In a joint tenancy:

In an individual tenancy:

France (bail solidaire): The solidary clause means each co-tenant can be pursued for the full rent, even after they have moved out — until a new co-tenant signs and is accepted by the landlord.

3. How Is the Deposit Split?

Agree in writing before moving in:

4. How Are Bills Divided?

Bills are not part of the tenancy agreement — they are a private arrangement between housemates. Common arrangements:

The tenancy agreement is silent on bills. Disputes about bills cannot be taken to a tenancy tribunal — they are private debts between housemates.

When a Housemate Stops Paying

This is the most common shared housing crisis. In a joint tenancy:

  1. You are liable for their share: The landlord can demand the full rent from you (or any other co-tenant) if one person stops paying.
  2. Pursue the non-paying housemate separately: You can seek to recover their share through small claims court or a debt recovery process — but this is your action, not the landlord's.
  3. Negotiate with the landlord: Explain the situation early. Some landlords will accept part-payment temporarily while you resolve the situation — but they are not obliged to.
  4. Consider a guarantor: If you are signing a joint tenancy and one housemate has a weaker financial background, request that they provide a personal guarantor.

Adding or Replacing Housemates

UK

In a joint tenancy, all existing joint tenants must agree to any change. If one tenant leaves, the landlord may:

There is no automatic right to replace a departing joint tenant.

France

Under a bail solidaire, a new co-tenant can replace a departing one if the landlord agrees. The departing co-tenant remains jointly liable until a new signed agreement is in place.

Australia and New Zealand

Assignment of a co-tenant's interest requires landlord consent. A new joint tenancy is often the cleanest approach.

House Rules and Housemate Agreements

While not legally binding in most jurisdictions, a written housemate agreement can prevent disputes. Consider covering:

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Not reading whether it's a joint or individual tenancy — the difference in liability is enormous
  2. Assuming you can leave whenever you want — in a joint tenancy, leaving without agreement may breach the lease and leave you liable for rent until someone replaces you
  3. Not agreeing deposit splits in writing — verbal agreements are almost impossible to enforce when deposits are disputed
  4. Paying bills in one person's name without a written arrangement — when they leave, utilities follow them unless agreements are in place
  5. Not vetting housemates carefully — in a joint tenancy, their credit and reliability affect you directly

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, tenant advocate, or legal aid service.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: If one housemate's name is not on the lease, what rights do they have?

A: Very few formal rights under tenancy law. They may be considered a subtenant of the named tenants rather than a direct tenant of the landlord. If the lease ends or the named tenants leave, the unnamed occupant may have no legal protection against eviction. Always ensure everyone who lives in the property is named on the lease or has a separate agreement.

Q: Can I remove a housemate from a joint tenancy?

A: Not unilaterally in most jurisdictions. You would need the cooperation of all joint tenants and the landlord to change the tenancy agreement. If a housemate is causing serious problems (non-payment, antisocial behaviour), seek advice from a tenant advocate before taking action.

Q: What happens if a joint tenant dies?

A: Under the legal principle of "survivorship," in a joint tenancy, the deceased tenant's interest typically passes to the surviving joint tenants (in common law jurisdictions). The lease usually continues with the remaining tenants. The landlord should be notified promptly.

Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib🐮 — Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.

Free tools to help you get started:

TS
Takayuki Sawai
Gyoseishoshi
Licensed compliance professional helping businesses navigate regulatory requirements worldwide through MmowW.

Ready for complete document preparation?

MmowW Scribe prepares your formation documents, compliance filings, and business paperwork across 7 countries.

Start 14-Day Free Trial →

No credit card required. From $149/month.

Loved for Safety.

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.
Loved for Safety.

¡No dejes que las regulaciones te detengan!

Ai-chan🐣 responde tus preguntas de cumplimiento 24/7 con IA

Probar gratis