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What the 2023 Social Housing Act and Awaab’s Law Mean for Rat Prevention, Fire Safety and Property Compliance

The 2023 Social Housing Act marks one of the most significant regulatory shifts for landlords, housing associations and property operators with Registered Provider status in recent years. Designed to improve tenant safety, health and living conditions, the Act places stronger requirements on landlords to manage hazards, including damp, mould, structural risks, and, from October 2026, pest control.

One of the most important additions is Awaab’s Law, named after Awaab Ishak, a two-year-old child who tragically died after prolonged mould exposure in his family’s social housing accommodation. This law sets strict deadlines for landlords to investigate, address and resolve health-related hazards in homes.

As partners with BPCA (British Pest Control Association), Nordisk Innovation recognises how essential proactive pest control, including rat prevention, is for compliance, building safety and tenant wellbeing. This blog post outlines what the new legislation requires, the risks landlords must now be aware of, and how rat blockers can play a critical role in meeting the coming standards.

Awaab’s Law: Clear Timeframes for Hazard Response

The UK Government has now issued formal guidance for social landlords through the BPCA, which you can read here

Under Awaab’s Law, landlords must follow strict timelines when a tenant reports a health-related hazard, including:

– Damp

– Mould

– Structural defects

– Water ingress

– and from October 2026: pest infestations (including rats)

Failure to act within mandated timeframes can result in penalties and reputational damage.

For the first time, rats and other pests will fall directly under a legal response requirement, along with other housing-related hazards.

Rat i Sewer

Why Rats Are Now a Compliance Issue, Not Just a Nuisance

Rat activity is not only unpleasant. It directly affects:

1. Tenant health

Rats can introduce bacteria, parasites and airborne contaminants. This places rat infestations firmly within the “health and safety hazards” category under the Social Housing Act

2. Fire safety

Rats frequently chew:

    • Electrical wiring
    • Cables
    • Fire-safety components
    • Sensors
    • Control panels

This increases the risk of electrical failures, compromised fire alarms, and even fire outbreaks, another category explicitly addressed in the Social Housing Act.

3. Electrical Hazards from Rats

Rats can also cause extensive and costly property damage. Like mice, they continually gnaw and will chew through cables and wiring, increasing the risk of electrical faults and fire hazards. Many insurance policies exclude fire caused by rodent damage, making prevention and early intervention even more critical for landlords.

4. Building integrity

Rats damage:

  • Pipes
  • Drainage systems
  • Ventilation routes
  • Structural cavities

Such issues can lead to damp and mould, making rat prevention indirectly relevant to Awaab’s Law as well.

5. Compliance deadlines

From October 2026, landlords will be required to investigate and resolve pest-related hazards within Awaab’s strict timelines.

That means prevention becomes essential, not optional.

 

Sewer Systems: The Hidden Entry Point

Most rat infestations begin underground.

Private sewers and ageing pipe networks are among the biggest access points for rats entering:

  • Bathrooms
  • Kitchens
  • Utility rooms
  • Floor drains
  • Voids and wall systems

This is why the UK Government and BPCA emphasise identifying the source, not just treating surface-level symptoms.

 

Rat Blockers as a Compliance Tool Under the Social Housing Act

Nordisk Innovation’s VA-approved rat blockers offer a physical, 100 % toxin-free barrier that prevents rats from moving up through the sewer system into homes and communal buildings.

This supports compliance in three key ways:

  • Proactive hazard prevention
  • Fire and electrical safety
  • Reduced risk of damp and mould
  • Faster case resolution
1

How Rat Blockers Support Awaab’s Law in Practice

Prevention: Blocks rats at the sewer source.
2

Documentation: Combined with TV inspections and repair plans, rat blockers support “effort evidence” required under the Act.
3

Non-toxic: No chemicals align with environmental and tenant safety standards.
4

Fire safety: Prevents wiring damage that could trigger fire hazards.
5

Faster compliance: Reduces backlogs and emergency visits by eliminating root causes.

Social Housing Act 2023 Makes Prevention Essential

With the introduction of the Social Housing Act and especially Awaab’s Law, rat prevention becomes a formal responsibility for landlords and housing operators.

By installing rat blockers, operators can:

  • Reduce complaints
  • Protect tenants
  • Meet legal deadlines
  • Strengthen fire safety
  • Lower long-term maintenance costs

Nordisk Innovation is committed to supporting the sector with reliable, certified and documented rat-prevention solutions.

Why Landlords Register as Registered Providers (RP)

For landlords and developers considering expanding into social or supported housing, RP status can unlock significant opportunities – but it also comes with major obligations.

Key reasons landlords choose to register:

1

Access to public funding
Only Registered Providers can receive government grants such as:
- Affordable Homes Programme (AHP)
- Regeneration funding
- Grants for new social or supported housing
Without RP status, most public funding streams are inaccessible.
2

Ability to legally offer “social housing”
To operate as:
- Social rent
- Affordable rent
- Intermediate rent
- Shared ownership
…landlords must be registered.
This opens access to stable demand, long waiting lists and predictable rental income.
3

Regulatory credibility
RP status signals strong governance, compliance and financial viability – making it easier to work with councils, investors and institutional partners.
4

Partnerships with local authorities
Many councils only lease properties from RPs or commission supported housing from registered bodies.
For landlords wanting to operate in homelessness, supported housing or long-term social letting, RP status is practically essential.
5

Improved access to finance
Banks and investors consider RPs lower-risk, often offering better borrowing terms.