
Landlords
Poor communication, surprise fees, compliance you're not sure about. Whatever the reason, we make the move clean and complete.
The short answer
Switching letting agents is usually far easier than staying unhappy: there is a notice period under your current contract, then a structured handover of funds, records and keys that we manage for you. Your tenant barely notices.
01
It's in your current terms of business. Typically a defined notice window. We'll read the agreement with you and confirm the exit terms, including any fees to be aware of.
02
A clean, professional handover request to your current agent covering tenancy documents, deposit registration, keys, compliance certificates and contractor arrangements.
03
We audit what arrives: deposit protection, gas and electrical records, licensing status. We fix anything that isn't right before it becomes your problem.
04
A courteous introduction, new payment details, and the same rent day. Good switches are boring for tenants. That's the point.
Usually yes. Management agreements are between you and the agent, separate from the tenancy itself. Your notice period applies, but the tenant's tenancy simply continues under new management.
Some agreements include exit or renewal-commission clauses. This is exactly what we check first, in writing, so you know the true cost of switching before you commit.
It's transferred or re-registered correctly as part of the handover, with the paperwork to prove it. One of the most common things we find done wrong.
Your notice period plus a short, structured handover. We do the chasing; you sign where needed.
Bring your current agreement to the conversation. We'll read the exit terms together and tell you honestly whether switching is worth it.