°Ç¸ç³Ô¹Ï

Skip to main content

Renting a room in someone's home: lodgers

Skip contents

Overview

You are a lodger if you rent a room in your landlord’s home and your landlord lives there too.

As a lodger, you will be either an:

  • ‘excluded occupier’
  • ‘occupier with basic protection’

If you’re an excluded occupier

You’re likely to be an excluded occupier if you:

  • live in your landlord’s home
  • share living spaces like a kitchen, bathroom or living room with your landlord

Shelter has more information about .

If you’re an occupier with basic protection

You’re likely to be an occupier with basic protection if you:

  • live in your landlord’s home
  • do not share living spaces like a kitchen, bathroom or living room with your landlord

Shelter has more information about  .

Types of agreement

You may have a tenancy agreement or a licence agreement.

If you have a licence agreement, you are called a licensee. Shelter has more information about .

The length of the let

A tenancy or a licence can be either:

  • periodic - run indefinitely from one rent period to the next
  • fixed term - last a set number of weeks, months or years

If you do not agree the length of a let, it will automatically become a periodic let.

Licences can be open-ended for informal arrangements, like allowing a friend to stay on an as-and-when basis.