EICR for landlords — what you need to know in 2026 | MP Electrical Honiton

EICR for landlords —
what you need to know in 2026

If you rent out a property in Devon, 2026 is not the year to let your electrics slip. Your original certificate may have expired. The fines have gone up. And a new law has just changed the entire shape of private renting in England.

Honiton, Devon NICEIC Registered Updated April 2026

What is an EICR?

An EICR — Electrical Installation Condition Report — is a full inspection of the fixed electrical installation in your rental property. The wiring, the consumer unit, the sockets, the circuits. Carried out by a qualified electrician. Takes a few hours depending on the size of the property.

At the end you get a written report. Every issue is given a code. To get a satisfactory result your property needs no C1s, C2s, or FIs on the report.

C1
Danger present. Needs fixing immediately. The report is unsatisfactory and circuits may need to be disconnected on the day.
C2
Potentially dangerous. Needs fixing urgently. The report is unsatisfactory until the work is completed and confirmed in writing.
C3
Improvement recommended. Not required to pass, but worth doing. A C3 alone won't fail the report — but it tells you something about the age or standard of the installation.
FI
Further investigation required. An issue exists that needs more investigation before it can be classified. The report is unsatisfactory until the investigation is completed.
Compromised consumer unit found during EICR inspection, East Devon
Compromised consumer unit — found during EICR inspection, East Devon
5 yrs
Maximum validity of an EICR — some older properties are given shorter intervals
£40k
Maximum fine for non-compliance — increased from £30,000 in November 2025
28 days
To complete remedial work after a failed report — sometimes less if the report specifies it

Why 2026 is different

None of them are good news for landlords who've let this slide.

01
Your certificate has probably expired
Landlords across England got their EICRs done in 2020 and 2021 when the rules first came in. EICRs are valid for five years. The first wave of those certificates is expiring right now. If you haven't checked the date recently, there's a real chance yours has already gone.
Check your expiry date today
02
The fines have gone up
The maximum penalty for non-compliance is now £40,000 — up from £30,000. That increase came into effect in November 2025. Local authorities also have stronger enforcement powers than they did when the rules first came in.
£40,000 maximum penalty
03
The Renters' Rights Act is now law
From 1 May 2026, all assured shorthold tenancies converted to rolling periodic tenancies. Section 21 no-fault evictions are gone. The Act reinforced landlord obligations around property standards — including the requirement for a valid EICR. Without one, you're exposed on multiple fronts.
In force from 1 May 2026

How often do you need one?

Every five years. Or sooner if the report specifies a shorter interval — which it sometimes does for older or larger properties.

One thing worth knowing: there's no anniversary rule with EICRs. If you renew early the five-year clock resets from the new inspection date, not your original one. So you lose any remaining time on your old certificate by renewing ahead of schedule.

That said — booking a few weeks early is still better than drifting past your expiry date without realising it.

Demand is high right now

A large number of certificates from the 2020 and 2021 rollout are all expiring within the same window. Qualified electricians across East Devon are busy. If you need a renewal — book it now, not when you're close to the wire.


What if my property fails?

A fail means a C1, C2, or FI on the report.

You have 28 days to get the remedial work done. Sometimes less — if the report specifies a shorter timescale you have to meet it.

Once the work is done your electrician provides written confirmation. That letter sits alongside the original report. Both go to your tenant within 28 days of the work being completed. Both go to the local authority on request.

If you ignore it, the local authority can arrange the work themselves — and bill you for it. That's before any fine is applied.

If further investigation is still required

The process repeats until the report is fully satisfactory. A new written confirmation is needed each time. Keep every letter alongside the original EICR — you'll need the full paper trail if the local authority asks.

Overheated main switch found during EICR inspection in Honiton
Overheated main switch — C1 finding during EICR inspection, Honiton

The paperwork checklist

This is the part most landlords get wrong — not the inspection itself, but what happens after it. Here is every document you need to hand over, who gets it, and when.

Document distribution — who gets what and when
Document Recipient Deadline Notes
EICR report Existing tenant Within 28 days of inspection
EICR report New tenant Before they move in Not within 28 days — before occupation
EICR report Prospective tenant Within 28 days of their written request If they ask before signing
EICR report Local authority Within 7 days of their written request Must supply on demand — no exceptions
Remedial letter Tenant Within 28 days of work completion Only required if C1, C2, or FI found
Remedial letter Local authority Within 28 days of work completion On request
EICR report Next electrician Before the next inspection They need the previous report to work from
The remedial confirmation letter must come from the electrician who carried out the work. It must confirm in writing that the identified issues have been resolved and that the installation now meets the required standard. Keep a copy alongside the original EICR.

Older properties in Devon

Older homes fail more often. That's just the reality.

East Devon has a huge stock of period properties. Thatched cottages. Cob farmhouses. Victorian terraces. 1960s and 1970s builds that have never been properly updated. Many still have consumer units without RCD protection. Some have wiring that hasn't been touched in forty or fifty years. Others have DIY additions from previous owners that were never compliant.

A C2 finding on an older Devon property isn't unusual. What matters is understanding exactly what needs doing and getting it sorted properly. If you're a landlord with an older East Devon property and you're not sure what state the electrics are in — that's precisely what an EICR is for.

Overheated busbar found during EICR inspection in Sidmouth
Overheated busbar — C2 finding during EICR inspection, Sidmouth
How much does it cost?

For a typical two or three bedroom property in Devon, expect to pay somewhere between £150 and £300. Larger properties, HMOs, or those with outbuildings and multiple circuits will sit higher. That's a small number relative to a £40,000 fine — or the cost of emergency remedial work on a property that's gone unchecked for a decade.


Who needs an EICR?

Private landlords renting residential properties in England. That's the straightforward answer. If you're a private landlord renting a standard residential property in Devon — you need one. No grey area.

The rules don't apply to:

Social housing providers
Lodgers who share facilities with a resident landlord or their family
Long leases of seven years or more
Student halls of residence
Hostels, refuges, care homes, and healthcare-related accommodation

What about holiday lets?

Holiday lets operated through platforms like Airbnb or as furnished holiday lettings don't fall under the same mandatory EICR regulations as standard private residential tenancies.

That said — your insurance almost certainly requires a valid electrical inspection. And your duty of care to guests is no less real than it is to long-term tenants. Most reputable holiday let operators in Devon get EICRs done regardless. It's the sensible thing to do.


A note on accuracy

The fine amount (£40,000) and the Renters' Rights Act date (1 May 2026) in this guide are confirmed from GOV.UK guidance updated November 2025 and are accurate as of April 2026. We carry out landlord EICRs across East Devon every week and keep this information current. If you have a specific compliance question we're happy to talk it through — no obligation.


Where we work
Landlord EICRs across Honiton & East Devon

MP Electrical carries out landlord EICRs across Honiton, Axminster, Ottery St Mary, Sidmouth, Seaton and the surrounding villages. You get a clear, honest report — no jargon, no unnecessary upselling. If the property needs remedial work we'll tell you exactly what, why, and what it costs to put right.

Honiton Sidmouth Ottery St Mary Axminster Seaton Colyton Exeter Lyme Regis Blackdown Hills Otter Valley Sid Valley

Book your landlord EICR in East Devon

Don't leave it until you're close to the wire. We're based in Honiton, NICEIC registered, and carry out landlord EICRs across East Devon every week. Fixed price, same-day response, full certificate on completion.