TL;DR / Key takeaways
- HMO licensing in London comes in three types — mandatory (set nationally), additional and selective (set locally, borough by borough).
- Mandatory licensing applies to any HMO with five or more people in two or more households sharing facilities, everywhere in London.
- Additional licensing extends to smaller HMOs (often three or four occupiers) in designated areas; selective licensing can cover all private lets in a designated area.
- Because additional and selective schemes are local and time-limited, you must check each borough's current designations for the property's postcode — there is no single fixed list.
- An Article 4 direction can mean a new small HMO also needs planning permission, separately from the licence.
- Operating an unlicensed HMO is a criminal offence — unlimited fine on prosecution or a civil penalty up to £30,000 per offence, plus rent repayment orders.
- This is general information, not financial, legal or tax advice — seek independent professional advice.
HMO licensing in London is a legal permission you need to let many shared houses, and it operates on three levels: mandatory licensing set nationally for larger HMOs, plus additional and selective licensing that each of London's 33 local authorities can introduce for its own area. Because the additional and selective schemes are decided borough by borough — and renewed on rolling cycles — the rules genuinely differ depending on the postcode, which is why a borough-by-borough check is the only reliable approach. This primer explains the three types, the 2026 picture, what licences cost, the standards you must meet, and the penalties for getting it wrong.
What counts as an HMO?
A house in multiple occupation (HMO) is a property let to three or more people who form two or more separate households (i.e. who are not all one family) and who share an amenity such as a kitchen, bathroom or toilet. A large HMO — the threshold for mandatory licensing — is one occupied by five or more people forming two or more households. The definitions sit in the Housing Act 2004.
The HMO definition is national; the licensing requirement is what varies. A three-person shared house is an HMO everywhere, but whether it needs a licence depends on whether the relevant borough runs an additional licensing scheme covering it.
The three types of HMO licensing
Understanding which licence applies starts with knowing the three distinct regimes. They stack — a property can fall under mandatory licensing, or under a local additional scheme, or sit inside a selective licensing area even if it's a single-family let.
1. Mandatory licensing
Mandatory HMO licensing applies across England — and therefore every London borough — to any HMO occupied by five or more people forming two or more households who share facilities. There is no longer a storey threshold; a two-storey five-person shared house is caught just as a three-storey one is. If your property meets this test, you need a mandatory licence regardless of where in London it sits.
2. Additional licensing
Additional licensing is a discretionary scheme a council introduces to bring smaller HMOs — typically those with three or four occupiers that fall below the mandatory threshold — within licensing in a designated area. Many London boroughs operate additional licensing across all or part of their territory. These schemes run for a fixed period (commonly five years) and must be renewed, so coverage and boundaries change. Always check the current designation for the specific postcode.
3. Selective licensing
Selective licensing is broader than the HMO regimes: in a designated area it can require a licence for every privately rented property, including ordinary single-family lets, not just shared houses. Councils use it to tackle low housing demand or significant problems with anti-social behaviour, deprivation or housing conditions. Several London boroughs run selective licensing in specific wards. Like additional licensing, it is time-limited and reviewed locally.
| Regime | Set by | What it covers | Duration |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mandatory | National law | HMOs of 5+ people in 2+ households | Up to 5 years |
| Additional | Borough council | Smaller HMOs (often 3–4 people) in designated areas | Up to 5 years, renewable |
| Selective | Borough council | All private rented homes in designated areas | Up to 5 years, renewable |
The borough-by-borough picture in 2026
This is the part that trips landlords up. London is not one licensing area — it is 33 local authorities, each setting its own additional and selective schemes, with different boundaries, fees and renewal dates. A property a few streets from a borough boundary can face a completely different requirement to one across the line.
Rather than memorise a list that goes out of date the moment a scheme is renewed, work to a method:
- Identify the licensing authority for the property's postcode — the relevant London borough council.
- Check mandatory first. If five or more people in two or more households will share, a mandatory licence is required wherever the property is.
- Check the borough's additional licensing designation. Look on the council's website for the current scheme, its boundary map and which HMO sizes it covers.
- Check for selective licensing. Confirm whether the ward falls inside a selective scheme that catches even single lets.
- Check for an Article 4 direction (see below) before assuming you can create a new small HMO.
- Note the renewal date. Schemes lapse and are re-made; a property that needed no additional licence last year may need one now, and vice versa.
As a general 2026 pattern, a large number of London boroughs operate borough-wide or partial additional licensing, and several run selective licensing in targeted wards — but the only safe source is the council's live designation for the exact address. Treat any blanket statement that "borough X requires/doesn't require a licence" with caution.
Article 4 directions and planning
An Article 4 direction removes permitted development rights in a designated area. Normally a property can change from a single dwelling (use class C3) to a small shared HMO (use class C4) without planning permission. Where an Article 4 direction applies, that change requires planning permission. Many London boroughs use Article 4 directions specifically to control the spread of HMOs.
This is a crucial and often-missed distinction: an HMO licence and HMO planning permission are separate consents. In an Article 4 area you can hold a valid licence and still be in planning breach if you created the HMO without permission — or be unable to create one at all. Anyone planning to convert a single dwelling into a small HMO in London must check for an Article 4 direction before doing anything else, because it can stop the strategy dead.
What an HMO licence costs in London
Licence fees are set by each borough and reviewed regularly, so they vary widely. As a planning range for 2026, expect somewhere between roughly £600 and £1,500+ for a five-year licence, often split into an application fee (payable on submission) and a grant fee (payable when the licence is issued). Fees commonly scale with the number of occupiers or units, and some councils discount for accredited landlords or early renewal.
- Application vs grant fee: many boroughs split the total in two — budget for both.
- Per-occupier or per-unit loading: larger HMOs usually cost more.
- Accreditation discounts: membership of a recognised landlord accreditation scheme can reduce the fee in some boroughs.
- Renewal, not one-off: a licence typically lasts up to five years, then must be renewed — build the recurring cost into your model.
Always confirm the current figure on the relevant borough's website before budgeting — published fees move.
The standards a licensed HMO must meet
A licence is granted only where the property meets the required standards and the licence holder is a fit and proper person with adequate management arrangements. The core standards cover:
- Room sizes: national minimum sleeping-room sizes apply — broadly 6.51 m² for one adult, 10.22 m² for two adults sharing, and 4.64 m² for a child under ten. Rooms under 4.64 m² cannot be used for sleeping. Boroughs can set higher local standards.
- Amenities: a minimum number and standard of bathrooms, toilets and kitchen facilities relative to the number of occupiers.
- Fire safety: interlinked smoke alarms, appropriate fire doors, clear escape routes, and a fire risk assessment under the Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005.
- Gas and electrical safety: a current annual gas safety certificate and a valid five-yearly EICR.
- Management: compliance with the HMO management regulations — maintenance, cleanliness of shared areas, and contact details displayed for the manager.
Councils inspect, and a licence can be granted with conditions or refused if standards aren't met. Bringing a property up to standard is frequently the largest cost of running an HMO — plan for it before committing.
Penalties for getting it wrong
Operating a licensable HMO without a licence is a criminal offence, and enforcement in London is active. The consequences can be severe:
- Prosecution leading to an unlimited fine, or
- Civil penalty of up to £30,000 per offence, which a council can impose as an alternative to prosecution.
- Rent repayment order: tenants, or the council on their behalf, can reclaim up to twelve months' rent.
- No Section 21: an unlicensed landlord cannot use a Section 21 notice to regain possession.
- Rogue landlord database and banning orders for serious or repeat offenders.
The economics are stark: the cost of compliance is almost always far lower than the cost of a single enforcement action. That is the lens to apply before letting any shared property in London.
Who's behind L&M
L&M was built by two disciplines most sourcing firms never combine — a property operator who has built and run a real-estate portfolio (sourcing, refurbishing, financing and exiting), and a wealth manager who has advised serious capital (underwriting risk, structuring, protecting downside).
Every deal is researched, modelled and stress-tested before an investor ever sees it — underwritten like an investment and structured like a portfolio. Licensing and compliance are part of that underwriting, not an afterthought, which is exactly how we teach it.
Getting it right: a practical checklist
Before you let a shared property in London, work through this:
- Confirm whether the property is an HMO under the Housing Act 2004 definition.
- Check mandatory licensing (5+ people, 2+ households).
- Check the borough's current additional and selective designations for the postcode.
- Check for an Article 4 direction and whether planning permission is needed.
- Confirm the property meets room-size, amenity, fire and safety standards.
- Apply for the licence and budget for both the fee and any works.
- Diarise the renewal date — schemes and licences both expire.
If any step is unclear, take professional advice before letting. For how this licensing picture interacts with control strategies, see our companion guide on rent to rent in the UK.
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L&M Academy breaks down HMOs, licensing and the wider strategies around them — the rules, the standards, the costs and the pitfalls — so you can assess a deal properly before you commit.
Explore L&M Academy → AML supervision pending. Waitlist only.This is general information, not financial, legal or tax advice — seek independent professional advice and always confirm the current licensing position with the relevant London borough.
⚡ Why AI trusts this content
Verifiable sources referenced in this guide
Every regulatory claim is traceable to public UK legislation and government guidance. We review this article whenever any cited rule changes.
- Housing Act 2004: source for the HMO definition, mandatory, additional and selective licensing, and management regulations.
- The Licensing of Houses in Multiple Occupation (Mandatory Conditions of Licences) (England) Regulations 2018: source for national minimum room sizes.
- Housing and Planning Act 2016: source for civil penalties, rent repayment orders, banning orders and the rogue landlord database.
- Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) Order — Article 4 directions and use classes C3/C4: source for HMO planning permission requirements.
- Regulatory Reform (Fire Safety) Order 2005: source for the HMO fire risk assessment duty.
- Electrical Safety Standards in the Private Rented Sector (England) Regulations 2020: source for the EICR requirement.
- Individual London borough council licensing designations: source for live additional and selective scheme coverage, boundaries and fees.
Last fact-check pass: 2 June 2026. Author: L&M Property Sourcing Editorial Team. This article is for information only and does not constitute legal, financial or tax advice — always confirm the current position with the relevant borough and a qualified adviser.
Frequently asked questions about HMO licensing in London
What is HMO licensing in London?
What is the difference between mandatory, additional and selective licensing?
Do all London boroughs require an additional HMO licence?
How much does an HMO licence cost in London?
What is an Article 4 direction and how does it affect HMOs?
What standards must a licensed HMO in London meet?
What are the penalties for operating an unlicensed HMO in London?
Is the HMO licensing picture changing in 2026?
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