Licence Checker England
Baseline coverage

Landlord licensing in Huntingdonshire

East of England

This baseline coverage page currently does not show active selective or additional licensing schemes for Huntingdonshire, but the latest local position should still be checked with the council and mandatory HMO licensing can still apply.

Council website
Selective Licensing

No active selective scheme shown

Additional Licensing

No active additional scheme shown

Mandatory HMO Licensing

Active mandatory HMO

Current status summary

What we currently show

No active local selective or additional licensing scheme is currently shown in our data. This page gives a trust-first status summary, official verification path, and next steps. This public page currently has 1 source linked or recorded.

What you still need to verify

Check live council wording for scheme boundaries, fees, dates, exemptions, application steps and whether the property setup changes the answer.

Official sources

Only a general official council website is currently shown, so look for housing or private rented sector licensing pages there.

Verify with the council

Our current data is based on publicly available information. Always verify the latest licensing position, scheme boundaries, fees, and exemptions with Huntingdonshire.

We currently link to the official council website rather than a dedicated licensing page for this council. The website link is sourced from the current Planning Data local-authority directory.

Council updates

Get updates for Huntingdonshire

We will email you if Huntingdonshire introduces, renews, or changes a licensing scheme. Free, occasional updates only. Always verify final requirements on the council website.

Free, occasional licensing updates only. You can unsubscribe at any time.

If you are still unsure

Keep the informational journey first. Use the free checker, the £29 review, or alerts only if you want help resolving uncertainty or tracking future change.

Free checker

Free · Live now

Check a postcode, open the council page, and use the guides before paying for anything.

Open the free checker

Property Licensing Check

£29 · Live now

A concise written review for one property, postcode, or council situation based on current public council-source information.

Request the review

Alerts and monitoring

£12.99/month · Coming soon

A lighter monitoring tier for selected councils or areas, aimed at landlords and smaller investors who want ongoing updates.

See alerts and monitoring

These are information services, not legal advice. Final reliance should still be checked against council sources.

Check a postcode in Huntingdonshire

Enter a postcode to see whether it appears to fall within a licensing scheme area, then verify the result with the council.

Free instant check. We do not store your postcode.

Research summary

These public research signals help show how recently this page was reviewed and what still needs checking before you rely on it.

Last reviewed

Not stated

Research confidence

Not stated

Sources checked

1

Important to verify

  • Whether any local scheme has changed since this page was last reviewed.
  • Whether mandatory HMO licensing could still apply for the intended use.

Mandatory HMO licensing

All councils in England must operate mandatory HMO licensing. This applies to properties with 5 or more occupants forming 2 or more separate households, regardless of location. If your property meets these criteria, you must apply for a mandatory HMO licence from Huntingdonshire council.

Visit the official council website

Other compliance requirements

In addition to licensing, all private landlords in England must comply with these requirements:

  • Gas Safety Certificate (CP12) - renewed annually
  • EICR (Electrical Installation Condition Report) - every 5 years
  • EPC rating of E or above - required before letting
  • Smoke and carbon monoxide alarms - checked at start of tenancy
  • Deposit protection - within 30 days of receiving deposit
  • Right to Rent checks - before tenancy starts
View full compliance checklist →

Common questions about licensing in Huntingdonshire

Do I need a landlord licence in Huntingdonshire?
Our current data does not show active selective or additional licensing schemes in Huntingdonshire. However, mandatory HMO licensing still applies across England to properties with 5 or more occupiers forming 2 or more households. Always verify with the council as schemes can change.
Does mandatory HMO licensing apply in Huntingdonshire?
Yes. Mandatory HMO licensing applies across all of England, including Huntingdonshire. It covers properties with 5 or more occupiers forming 2 or more separate households. You must apply to Huntingdonshire council for a mandatory HMO licence if your property meets these criteria.
What happens if I rent without a licence in Huntingdonshire?
Operating a licensable property without the correct licence can lead to enforcement action. For offences committed on or after 1 May 2026, GOV.UK guidance refers to civil penalties of up to £40,000 for relevant offences, with different treatment for breaches and for offences committed before that date. Earlier cases may still be assessed under previous rules. Tenants or local authorities may be able to apply for a rent repayment order. GOV.UK guidance now refers to up to two years' rent for relevant offences, but eligibility, timing and the final amount depend on the facts and tribunal decision. From 1 May 2026, Section 21 notices can no longer be used for existing or new private tenancies in England. Transitional rules may still matter for notices served before that date.

Still unsure? Choose the next step that fits you

Use these routes to move from the Huntingdonshire summary into the most relevant next action for your property, role, or research task.

Important disclaimer

This tool provides general information about landlord licensing schemes in England. Results are based on publicly available data and may not reflect recent changes. This is not legal advice. Always verify licensing requirements directly with your local council before making decisions.