Scotland Lease Requirements: PRT Statutory Terms and Model Agreement
Understand Scotland's PRT lease requirements, including mandatory statutory terms, the Model Tenancy Agreement, and prohibited lease conditions.
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.
Unlike jurisdictions where a landlord can draft a lease from scratch with extensive custom terms, Scotland's Private Residential Tenancy includes mandatory statutory terms that cannot be removed or altered. The Scottish Government provides a Model Tenancy Agreement that reflects these requirements.
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 Model Tenancy Agreement
The Scottish Government publishes a Model Private Residential Tenancy Agreement that is recommended for all private lettings. While landlords are not legally required to use this exact document, any tenancy agreement they create must contain all of the mandatory statutory terms set out in the 2016 Act and its associated regulations.
The Model Agreement contains three types of clauses:
- Mandatory Clauses (Statutory Terms): These are set in law and cannot be modified or removed. Even if a landlord omits them from the agreement, they are implied into the tenancy by operation of law.
- Discretionary Clauses: These are optional terms that the landlord and tenant can include or modify (e.g., whether pets are allowed, furniture inventory).
- The "Easy Read Notes": A plain-English summary of rights and responsibilities recommended to be included alongside the agreement.
Key Mandatory Statutory Terms
The following terms are embedded into every PRT by law, regardless of what the written agreement says:
Rent and Payment
- The agreement must state the rent amount and the payment frequency.
- The landlord can only increase rent once per 12 months with 3 months' notice.
Deposit
- If a deposit is taken, it must not exceed two months' rent and must be lodged with an approved scheme within 30 working days.
Landlord's Obligations
- Provide the property in a habitable condition meeting the Repairing Standard.
- Ensure all gas, electrical, and fire safety requirements are met.
- Insure the property (building insurance).
- Give at least 48 hours' notice before entering the property (except in emergencies).
Tenant's Obligations
- Pay rent on time.
- Use the property as their only or principal home.
- Look after the property and report any damage or disrepair promptly.
- Allow access for inspections and repairs with reasonable notice.
Ending the Tenancy
- The tenant can end the tenancy by giving 28 days' notice (the "Notice to Leave" equivalent for tenants is a "Notice to End the Tenancy").
- The landlord can only end the tenancy using one of the 18 statutory grounds.
Prohibited Lease Conditions
Courts will not enforce lease conditions that conflict with the PRT's statutory framework. A landlord cannot:
- Include a break clause or fixed end date that overrides the PRT's open-ended nature.
- Waive the Repairing Standard or shift structural maintenance responsibility to the tenant.
- Impose excessive "void rent" charges if the tenant vacates before a notional fixed period.
- Charge the tenant for the cost of referencing, credit checks, or preparing the tenancy agreement (these are banned fees under the Letting Agent Code of Practice).
- Include a clause that prohibits pets unless the landlord can demonstrate a reasonable justification (under the Housing (Scotland) Act 2025).
Written vs. Oral Agreements
While a PRT can technically exist without a written agreement (the statutory terms are implied by law), operating without a written lease is extremely ill-advised. Without a written agreement, disputes about discretionary terms (pet policy, furniture inventory, specific maintenance responsibilities) become significantly harder to resolve.
How Landager Helps
Landager embeds Scotland's statutory terms directly into its lease generation template. Landlords cannot accidentally remove mandatory PRT clauses, and the platform automatically appends the required Tenant Information Pack. Each signed lease is stored in a digital vault alongside the associated deposit scheme reference, safety certificates, and the property's EPC.
Sources & Official References
พร้อมที่จะทำให้ธุรกิจให้เช่าของคุณง่ายขึ้นแล้วหรือยัง?
เข้าร่วมกับเจ้าของบ้านอิสระหลายพันรายที่ได้ปรับปรุงธุรกิจของตนกับ Landager
