This Section 21 requirement appears met: landlord responded within 14 days

That weakens the retaliatory chain on its own facts, although the adequacy of the response still matters.

Legal basis for this outcome

This outcome is based on Deregulation Act 2015, section 33. Because the landlord responded within 14 days, this single requirement appears met on the facts entered, but other Section 21 requirements can still make the notice invalid.

Legal conclusion: No obvious issue identified. Confidence: Medium confidence.

How the checker uses this point: A timely response does not end the branch automatically, but it pushes the checker to ask whether the response was actually adequate.

Why it matters legally: The checker distinguishes between a prompt landlord response and a delayed one because the retaliatory-eviction sequence depends on what happened after the tenant complained.

What could change the answer: The answer can change if the landlord's response was timely and adequate, if the council did not serve a qualifying notice, or if a notice was later quashed. A missing complaint date, email chain, or council notice often turns a strong point into an evidence problem instead of a clear bar.

What to gather

  • Your written complaint to the landlord, with the date sent and the landlord's reply if any.
  • Council environmental health emails, case references, inspection notes, or notice documents.
  • The Section 21 notice date compared with the complaint and council-enforcement timeline.

What to do next

  • Treat this as one point in the chain, not as a final answer on the whole notice.
  • Run the full Section 21 checker because other defects may still matter.
  • Keep the underlying documents in case the landlord's evidence differs from what you were told.

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Common questions

Does "the landlord responded within 14 days" automatically decide the whole notice?
No. This page isolates one legal condition from the full Section 21 chain. A legacy notice can still rise or fall on other dates, documents, deposit issues, licensing points, or retaliatory-eviction facts.
What evidence usually matters most?
Your written complaint to the landlord, with the date sent and the landlord's reply if any. Council environmental health emails, case references, inspection notes, or notice documents. The Section 21 notice date compared with the complaint and council-enforcement timeline.
What should I do next?
Treat this as one point in the chain, not as a final answer on the whole notice. Run the full Section 21 checker because other defects may still matter. Keep the underlying documents in case the landlord's evidence differs from what you were told.

Use the interactive checker on getrentersrights.com for the full step-by-step result.