The 2026 Guide to the 90-Day Rule in London What Every Landlord Must Know

Why the 90-Day Rule Still Confuses Landlords

More than any other regulation, the 90-day rule creates uncertainty for London landlords. It appears simple on paper but raises complex questions about:

  • Enforcement processes
  • Planning permission exemptions
  • Allowable guest types
  • Legal ways to maximise earnings

Most agencies explain it poorly or avoid it entirely. This guide delivers clarity so you can operate confidently in 2026.

The 90-Day Rule – Plain English

The Core Rule

Most residential properties in Greater London can be short-let for up to 90 nights per calendar year without planning permission.

90 Nights Means:

  • January 1 – December 31 tracking
  • Nights count individually (not stays)
  • Resets January 1 annually

Applies To:

  • Houses
  • Flats
  • Owner-occupied homes
  • Most residential properties

Properties EXEMPT from 90-Day Rule

Type Description
C1/C3 Planning Short-let/hotel permission
Purpose-Built Serviced apartments
Whole Building Collective approval

2026 Enforcement Reality

  • Airbnb auto-blocks at 90 nights
  • Council data-sharing with platforms
  • £5K-£20K fines per breach
  • Permanent listing restrictions

90 Nights Can Beat Full-Year Long-Let

Short-Let (90 Nights) Long-Let (365 Nights)
Revenue £12K-£28K £18K-£28K
Flexibility High Low

Checkinly 90-Day Strategy

  • Peak period calendar planning
  • PriceLabs + manual pricing
  • Clear guest communication
  • Property condition protection

Operate Confidently in 2026

The 90-day rule rewards strategic landlords who plan peak periods, price intelligently, and maintain premium presentation. Compliance becomes your competitive advantage.

London landlords using just 90 nights strategically often outperform full-year long-let returns.

Discover your property’s 90-day earning potential:

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