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Thousands of landlords given deadline warning as ‘unlimited fines’ could be issued

by News Desk
July 18, 2025
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Thousands of landlords given deadline warning as ‘unlimited fines’ could be issued
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The government published a joint plan with the social housing sector

The government published a joint plan with the social housing sector (Image: PA)

The government has announced that thousands of buildings with unsafe cladding are set to be fixed faster thanks to new legislation and over £1bn of investment in social housing remediation.

Yesterday, the government published a joint plan with the social housing sector to accelerate remediation across England, as well as setting out plans for a new law as part of the second phase of the Remediation Acceleration Plan. A commitment by government to invest over £1bn to give social landlords equal access to government funding schemes as private building owners, is at the heart of the plans.

The Cladding Safety Scheme guidance has been changed so that the equal access policy can be implemented with immediate effect. As part of this work, housing associations, local authorities and regulators are committing to accelerate work to assess and fix social housing buildings, and to improve support to social tenants before, during and after remedial works.

A new Remediation Bill is also being brought forward to make sure that landlords are held to account for fixing unsafe cladding and to tackle the slow pace of action across the sector. Remediation is the action of remedying something, in particular of reversing or stopping environmental damage.

The legislation will require landlords of buildings 18m or more in height with unsafe cladding to complete remediation by the end of 2029, and landlords of buildings 11-18m in height to complete remediation by the end of 2031.

Those who fail to comply could face unlimited fines or imprisonment, if they do not have a reasonable excuse. New legislation will also give some named bodies and local authorities powers to remediate buildings with unsafe cladding if the landlord fails to do so.

On Gov.uk, it states: “These reforms will help to make homes safer, reinforcing the government’s mission to restore confidence in building safety, and make sure that tragedies like the Grenfell Tower fire can never happen again. They will also help the sector to build the affordable homes that the country needs.”

Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, Angela Rayner said: “Today we have given social landlords access to over £1 billion to remediate unsafe cladding and make residents safe. The social sector is ready to rise to the challenge and make sure that residents are safe in their homes.

“We are also today sending a clear message to those responsible for a building still wrapped in unsafe cladding: act now or face the consequences. Our Remediation Bill will include a new duty on you to make your building safe by a specified date, and new powers to impose serious penalties on those who fail to comply with the duty, and ultimately to bypass them if necessary to make the building safe.”

Additional support has also been announced for leaseholders, including long-term support to help replace Waking Watch measures and shield leaseholders from costly interim safety measures. For the first time, government funding will also be made available to support fire-safety cladding remediation works on buildings under 11 metres, in exceptional cases where no alternative viable funding route exists.

The government has also recently laid regulations for the Building Safety Levy, delivering on a key commitment from the initial Remediation Acceleration Plan. The levy is expected to raise £3.4bn over the next decade to help fund remediation and will come into force from October 2026.

Since publication of the Remediation Action Plan in December 2024, 24,000 more residents are living in homes that have been remediated. Progress is being made, and must continue until every unsafe building is fixed.



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