Your Section 21 notice needs checking: written complaint date can be proved
That helps on sequencing because it lets the checker compare the complaint, the landlord's response, the council escalation, and the notice in the right order.
Legal basis for this outcome
This outcome is based on Deregulation Act 2015, section 33. Because the written complaint date can be proved, 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: A provable complaint date improves confidence across the whole retaliatory-eviction branch.
Why it matters legally: The complaint date matters because the retaliatory-eviction chain is highly sequence-sensitive. It can affect how the landlord's 14-day response window is judged.
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
- 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.
Free checkers
- Re-run the checker
Run the full Section 21 checker again to test this point with the rest of the notice chain. - Can my landlord evict me?
Read the broader eviction guide if the landlord may switch routes or has already started court action.
Related guidance inside this topic
- If your next step turns on legacy Section 21 notice rules, read overview of tenant rights in England.
- For the dates, forms, and evidence behind legacy Section 21 notice rules, see no gas safety certificate article before you respond.
- If this issue overlaps with legacy Section 21 notice rules, check renter checklist guide to compare the legal tests.
- For a fuller breakdown of legacy Section 21 notice rules, use legacy Section 21 checker for the underlying rule set.
- If you need the route-specific rules on legacy Section 21 notice rules, start with reasons a Section 21 notice may be defective so you can check the dates and documents against your own case.
Related articles
- Section 21 abolished: what happens now?
The transition guide for pre-cutoff notices, the 1 May 2026 changeover, and when possession analysis switches to Section 8. - Old rules vs new rules after May 2026
The side-by-side transition guide for Section 21, Section 8, rent increases, and periodic tenancies after 1 May 2026. - Renters' Rights Act 2026: complete guide
The main reform guide covering Section 21 abolition, Section 8, rent increases, pets, and private rented sector enforcement changes. - Section 21 validity outcome guides
Index of all 72 outcome guides from the Section 21 checker — grouped by topic: deposit protection, prescribed documents, notice timing, licensing, and retaliatory eviction. - Can my landlord evict me in 2026?
A route-selection guide for tenants trying to distinguish valid possession, informal pressure, and unlawful eviction.
Common questions
- Does "the written complaint date can be proved" 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?
- 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.