If you are worried that you may have nowhere to live soon you are likely to be feeling stressed or anxious. You might be facing eviction by your landlord, who has given you a section 21 notice or a family member or partner might have asked you to leave. You might end up sofa surfing with friends or family if you can't find somewhere to live soon.
Whatever the reason behind your housing problem, you might well be feeling that you don’t have the energy to sort it out or don’t know how to get help. But, the sooner you do the sooner things are likely to get better. Start by reading this guide. Perhaps a support worker, friend or relative can read through it with you and help you take the next steps.
Free legal advice for housing problems
You can get free legal advice under a new government scheme if you have received a written notice that someone is seeking the possession of your home. This might be an email or letter from your landlord or from a company you owe money to, known as a creditor.
A housing expert may be able to help with:
- illegal eviction,
- disrepair and other problems with housing conditions, like damp and mould,
- rent arrears,
- mortgage arrears,
- welfare benefits payments,
- debt.
If you have to go to court, a housing adviser can also provide free legal advice and representation at the court hearing.
To find an adviser who can help you via this scheme, go to find-legal-advice.justice.gov.uk. Put in your postcode and then tick the box ‘Housing Loss Prevention Advice Service’
About this guide
This guide is for you if:
- you may be made homeless,
- you live in England, and,
- you have British citizenship or the right to remain in the UK.
It is also for people supporting others in this situation, for example, housing support workers and advice workers as well as relatives and friends.
This guide is not for you if:
- you live outside England - (the law is different in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland),
- you are not eligible for help with housing - This is about your immigration status. See the section called Eligibility assessment for more help on this
This guide explains:
- When the council must treat you as threatened with homelessness.
- When and how to contact the council for help.
- How the council will work out if you are eligible for help with housing.
- What the council must do to help stop you from becoming homeless - known as the ‘Prevention duty’
- How the council works out how to help you and what your Personal Housing Plan is.
- What you should do if the council doesn’t agree to help you.
We try to explain any legal language or technical terms as we go along but there is also a What does it mean? section at the end of the guide where we explain some important legal or technical terms.
Do you support homeless people and those threatened with homelessness?
In our support your clients with housing section you will find a guide for support workers and volunteers. It aims to equip them with the knowledge and skills to better help those they support to make a housing application to the council, get a fair Personal Housing Plan, secure emergency accomodation for tonight, challenge a decision by the council, and get legal advice