Your Section 21 notice needs checking: notice was served after the first four months of the original tenancy

That clears this timing rule on its own, but the notice can still fail elsewhere in the chain.

Legal basis for this outcome

This outcome is based on Housing Act 1988, section 21. Because the notice was served after the first four months of the original tenancy, the point needs checking alongside the dates, documents, and other Section 21 requirements before you can treat the notice as safe or defective.

Legal conclusion: Possible issue identified. Confidence: Medium confidence.

How the checker uses this point: Once the first-four-month bar is cleared, the checker keeps testing the remaining Section 21 gateways.

Why it matters legally: A Section 21 notice cannot usually be served in the first four months of the original tenancy. That is why the original tenancy start date still matters, even after renewals.

What could change the answer: A different service date, possession date, or claim issue date could move the notice back inside or outside the transition window. A re-served notice or later corrected notice can change which timeline applies.

What to gather

  • The Section 21 notice itself, including the date served and the possession date written in it.
  • The tenancy agreement, plus any earlier renewal or replacement tenancy documents.
  • Any court claim form, issue date, or possession paperwork if proceedings have started.

What to do next

  • Keep the notice and supporting documents together so you can test the full chain, not just this point.
  • Run the full Section 21 checker to see whether this combines with other issues.
  • If the landlord starts court action, keep the evidence ready for a defence or advice appointment.

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Common questions

Does "the notice was served after the first four months of the original tenancy" 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?
The Section 21 notice itself, including the date served and the possession date written in it. The tenancy agreement, plus any earlier renewal or replacement tenancy documents. Any court claim form, issue date, or possession paperwork if proceedings have started.
What should I do next?
Keep the notice and supporting documents together so you can test the full chain, not just this point. Run the full Section 21 checker to see whether this combines with other issues. If the landlord starts court action, keep the evidence ready for a defence or advice appointment.

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