Scotland Maintenance Obligations and the Repairing Standard

Understand Scotland's Repairing Standard for rental properties, landlord maintenance duties, 2024 updates, and tenant remedies via the First-tier Tribunal.

4 min read
Verified Mar 2026
maintenancescotlandrepairing-standardhabitabilitylandlord-duties

Legal Disclaimer

This content is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Laws change frequently — always verify current regulations and consult a licensed attorney in your jurisdiction for advice specific to your situation. Landager is a property management platform, not a law firm.

Scotland's maintenance framework is codified in the Repairing Standard, set out in the Housing (Scotland) Act 2006. This standard defines a comprehensive minimum property condition that landlords must meet at the start of every tenancy and maintain throughout.

Disclaimer: This guide provides general legal information for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Always consult a qualified Scottish solicitor for advice specific to your situation. Information last verified: March 2026.

The Repairing Standard

A property meets the Repairing Standard when:

  1. The property is wind and watertight and in all other respects reasonably fit for human habitation.
  2. The structure and exterior (walls, roof, foundations, windows, external doors) are in a reasonable state of repair.
  3. Installations for water, gas, electricity, sanitation, heating, and hot water are in a reasonable state of repair and proper working order.
  4. Any fixtures, fittings, and furnishings provided by the landlord are in a reasonable state of repair and proper working order.
  5. Any furnishings provided by the landlord comply with fire safety regulations.
  6. Smoke alarms, heat alarms, and carbon monoxide detectors are properly installed and in working order (all must be interlinked).

March 2024 Updates

The Repairing Standard was significantly enhanced in March 2024 to include:

  • Lead Testing: Landlords must ensure that the water supply has been tested for lead. If lead is detected above safe levels, remedial works must be carried out.
  • RCD Protection: The electrical installation must have Residual Current Device (RCD) protection to reduce the risk of electrical shock and fire.
  • Fixed Heating: A fixed heating system must be provided (portable heaters alone are not sufficient).
  • Food Preparation and Storage: Adequate facilities for the safe storage and preparation of food must be available.

Landlord's Ongoing Duties

The Repairing Standard is not a one-time check. Landlords must:

  • Inspect the property at the start of every tenancy (and ideally periodically throughout).
  • Respond promptly to repair requests from the tenant.
  • Carry out repairs within a reasonable timeframe. While "reasonable" is not strictly defined in days, landlords should address urgent issues (no heating in winter, water leaks, broken locks) within 24-48 hours and non-urgent repairs within 4-6 weeks.

Damp and Mould (Awaab's Law)

Following high-profile cases in England, the Scottish Government announced plans to extend "Awaab's Law" to private rented homes. This law would impose strict legal timelines on landlords to investigate and remediate damp and mould hazards. Implementation for the private rented sector is anticipated later in 2026.

Tenant Remedies

If a landlord fails to meet the Repairing Standard, the tenant can:

  1. Apply to the First-tier Tribunal for Scotland: The tenant does not need to go to a traditional court. The Tribunal can issue a Repairing Standard Enforcement Order (RSEO), compelling the landlord to carry out specific repairs within a set timeframe.
  2. Rent Relief: In severe cases, the Tribunal can reduce the rent the tenant pays until the repairs are completed.
  3. Local Authority Action: Tenants can also report the issue to their local authority's environmental health department, which can serve statutory improvement notices on the landlord.

Note: Scotland does not have a US-style "repair and deduct" right. Tenants cannot unilaterally hire a contractor and deduct the cost from their rent. The remedy must go through the Tribunal or local authority.

How Landager Helps

Landager's maintenance portal allows tenants to log repair requests with time-stamped photos and descriptions. Landlords can track response times and vendor invoices, building a defensible paper trail that demonstrates compliance with the Repairing Standard in case of a Tribunal application.

Back to Scotland Landlord-Tenant Laws Overview.

Jeste li spremni pojednostaviti svoj posao iznajmljivanja?

Pridružite se tisućama nezavisnih iznajmljivača koji su pojednostavili svoje poslovanje s Landagerom.

Započnite 14-dnevno besplatno probno razdoblje