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Clampdown on wording of lettings listings

There’s been a clampdown on imprecise wording used in lettings listings.

The National Trading Standards Estate and Lettings Agency Team  - which governs lettings agents as well as sales and buying agents - says the clampdown is to provide clarity and consistency for consumers and improve standards across the industry.

The lettings-centric terms that the clampdown focuses on are:

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Under Offer - NTSELAT says: “A property where an offer has been received which is under consideration by the landlord, but the property is normally still on the market, i.e., further offers may be made dependent upon the landlord’s written instructions. This description should only be used until the offer is accepted or declined.”

Let Agreed - NTSELAT says: “A property where a landlord has, in principle, agreed to enter into a rental agreement4 with a prospective renter, subject to further checks and referencing. The use of this term is not subject to a relevant person having received a holding deposit from the prospective renter.”

Let - “A property where a landlord and renter have entered into a binding rental agreement.”

New On The Market - NTSELAT says: “A property that has not been advertised since the last sale or let of that property. This description should only be used for short period of time.

New Instruction - NTSELAT says: “A property where an agent has recently been instructed to market (and which may have been offered for sale by another agent without being sold or let); the description should only be used for a short period of time.”

New and Exclusive - “A property that is either a new instruction or new on the market which is exclusive to that agent or portal (depending on the context). The description ‘new’ should only be used for a short period of time, although the term ‘exclusive’ can be used for as long as it is applicable.”

New Method of Sale/Let - “A property that is now being advertised for sale or let using an alternative mechanism to the original advert (e.g., changing to an auction or sealed bid for a property sale). This description should only be used for a short period of time.”

Reduced - “A property that has been recently reduced in price. Any reduction should be a genuine reduction against the previous price, in accordance with the Chartered Trading Standards Institute’s ‘Guidance for Traders on Pricing Practices’.”

Emma Cooke, policy and information manager at NTSELAT, says: “Agents commonly use terms like ‘new on the market’, ‘new instruction’, ‘under offer’, ‘sale/let agreed’, ‘sold/let subject to contract’ in advertisements, marketing boards and on property portal listings. 

“Delays in updating a property’s listing status or use of incorrect descriptions can lead to frustration for all involved in the buying or renting process – as well as risking agents breaching industry codes and their legal obligations.

“This updated guidance is intended to provide consistency and clarity and – by providing a working definition – we hope this helps reduce unnecessary confusion for property agents, consumers, and other organisations in the property industry.” 

For other sales-only references made in the NTSELAT guidance, and the full note that it has released, check here

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  • icon

    I'm surprised it is felt that tenants actually read adverts to that detail. I mainly use SpareRoom and well over half the respondents clearly haven't read the advert.
    For example:
    Advert: All rooms are for single occupancy only.
    Enquiry: My wife and I need a double room for us and our baby.

    Advert: Room available on the second floor in a 5 person student house for 11 month tenancy.
    Enquiry: I am a 52 year old unemployed person with complex health conditions needing a long-term ground floor bedsit.

    Advert: En-suite double room in graduate professional household. Housemates would prefer someone friendly and sociable who works conventional hours.
    Enquiry: I work shifts but only do nights every third week. Day shift starts at 6am. I only really want somewhere to sleep and keep myself to myself.

    The list is endless. Some of the enquiries are quite amusing, some are genuinely desperate.
    Working out how or if to respond to some of them can be very time consuming. I feel not responding is rude but then again not reading the advert in the first place and wasting my time is equally rude.
    The whole discrimination thing is tricky. Is it discrimination if the applicant clearly isn't suitable and hasn't read the advert?

  • Yvette Graham

    I tell them all to come at the same time nowadays, out of 70 people asking for a viewing in a room 30 booked and 5 turned up - amazing ! I could have been there for hours if I gave each a 10 min slot

  • Matthew Payne

    No agents in lettings use the term under offer. NTSELAT is either being misquoted or doesnt have a clue about the marketplace.

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