Pest Control in Domestic Properties: Tenant vs Landlord Responsibility, Evidence-Gathering and Safe Product Use

Quick Answer: Responsibility for pest control in a rented property depends on whether the infestation was pre-existing or caused by the tenant's own conduct. Under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 and the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018, landlords must maintain properties in a condition fit for human habitation — which includes keeping them free from infestations that arise from structural defects, disrepair, or the property's inherent condition. Tenants are responsible for infestations caused by their own behaviour, such as failing to dispose of food waste. In practice, disputes are common and thorough evidence-gathering by a pest controller is essential.

Summary

Pest control call-outs to domestic properties — houses, flats, HMOs, and social housing — frequently involve a question of liability. Who pays: the landlord or the tenant? The answer is rarely straightforward, but the legal framework has become clearer since the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018 came into force in March 2019. That Act extended the implied fitness covenants in the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 to apply to any residential tenancy, giving tenants an actionable right to bring a claim if the property is unfit for habitation — including by reason of a pest infestation.

For pest controllers, this legal backdrop has two practical implications. First, a detailed and impartial survey report can become evidence in a landlord-tenant dispute. Writing a vague report ("found some mice, treated") leaves the operative exposed if the customer later disputes who was responsible. A specific, evidence-based report protects the pest controller and helps all parties understand the true cause. Second, product selection in occupied domestic properties requires greater care than in commercial settings. Vulnerable occupants — children, elderly people, asthmatics, pregnant women, pets — are present in ways that do not apply to empty commercial units.

Social housing providers (local councils, housing associations) typically have their own pest control contracts, but private landlords and individual tenants are the primary customers for independent pest controllers. Understanding the responsibility framework, knowing what questions to ask and what evidence to gather, and recommending the right products and communication approach all add professional value to what might otherwise look like a commodity service.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Scenario Likely Responsibility Evidence to Gather
Rats entering via broken drain Landlord CCTV drain survey, photos of breakage
Mice via gap in external brickwork at DPC level Landlord Photos of gap, survey measurements
Bed bugs from new second-hand furniture Tenant Photos of furniture, tenant's account
Cockroaches in dirty, poorly maintained kitchen Tenant (unless structural damp) Photos of conditions, hygiene evidence
Fleas from tenant's pets Tenant Tenant disclosure, evidence of pets
Wasps' nest in roof void Neither (natural occurrence) Landlord to arrange treatment
Mice in communal area of HMO Landlord (common parts) Survey of communal area and building perimeter
Rats in garden due to neighbouring property Complex — may involve local authority Confirm source, advise EHO notification

Detailed Guidance

The Legal Framework: What Each Party Owes

Landlords owe a duty under the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 (as amended by the 2018 Act) to keep the property fit for human habitation. The 2018 Act specifically lists "freedom from damp", "adequate ventilation", and "structural integrity" as relevant to fitness, but the courts have interpreted the Act broadly. A property infested with rats entering through a broken sewer — a structural matter the landlord is responsible for maintaining — will likely render the property unfit, giving the tenant an actionable claim.

Landlords also have obligations under the Environmental Protection Act 1990 not to allow their property to be a statutory nuisance. A severe infestation that affects neighbouring properties can be a statutory nuisance, leading to local authority enforcement action.

Tenants have duties too. The standard assured shorthold tenancy agreement includes obligations to keep the property clean, to dispose of refuse properly, and not to cause damage. A tenant who allows food to accumulate, keeps rubbish in the property, or causes conditions that attract pests is responsible for the resulting infestation — and the costs of treating it.

The grey areas are common: a tenant in poor living conditions who also contributes to those conditions through their behaviour; a property with borderline structural defects that become active pest routes; a flat in a block where the infestation originates from a neighbouring unit or the communal bin store. In these cases, a detailed survey report is invaluable. The pest controller should describe observable facts — not apportion blame — and leave it to the parties and their advisors to apply the law.

Evidence-Gathering Best Practice

The survey report is the document everything else depends on. For domestic jobs with any hint of a liability question, the report should capture:

1. Pest species and activity level

2. Structural observations

3. Hygiene and housekeeping observations

4. Structural recommendations

5. Treatment plan

Product Selection in Occupied Domestic Properties

Professional products can be used in occupied domestic properties, but the selection must reflect the specific circumstances. Key considerations:

Children and pets:

Asthmatics and respiratory conditions:

Pregnant women:

Pets:

Food storage and preparation areas:

Communicating With Tenants and Landlords

In any tenanted property, there are at least two parties to manage: the person who paid for the treatment and the person living there. These may not be the same person.

Tell the tenant in writing:

Tell the landlord (if commissioning):

For social housing and housing association contracts, reporting is typically built into the service agreement. For private landlords, issue a written report on the day of the treatment — do not rely on a verbal briefing.

Working With Local Authority Environmental Health

For severe infestations, particularly in HMOs or properties with vulnerable tenants, the local authority environmental health team has an enforcement role. The Environmental Protection Act 1990 (statutory nuisance) and the Housing Act 2004 (HHSRS) give EHOs powers to inspect, issue improvement notices, and — in extremis — arrange for work to be done at the landlord's expense.

As a pest controller, you may be asked to provide a report for use in EHO proceedings. Write your reports accordingly: factual, dated, specific, and without professional opinion on liability. Let the legal framework speak for itself.

If a tenant asks you to act as their witness against their landlord, decline to take sides — note that you can provide a factual survey report and that both parties can use it. Your professional credibility depends on impartiality.

Frequently Asked Questions

A tenant says the mice were there before they moved in. How do I establish this?

You cannot establish it with certainty, but you can note supporting evidence: age of droppings, evidence of established runs (dark smear marks take time to develop), structural defects that suggest a long-term entry route, and the general condition of the property. Fresh-looking defects (recently broken mortar, new pipe entry points not yet sealed) suggest recent infestation. Established smear marks and multiple nest sites suggest longer-term. Write what you observe. The adjudication between parties is not your job.

Does a landlord have to pay for pest control every time a tenant reports pests?

No. If the infestation is clearly caused by the tenant's conduct — for example, a cockroach infestation in a kitchen full of uncovered food — the landlord is not obliged to pay. However, if there is any structural element (which there often is), the landlord cannot simply refuse. The safest approach for landlords is to arrange a professional survey to establish cause, then act on the findings.

Can I use professional insecticides in a flat with a baby?

Yes, but with care. Select products with the best safety profile for the situation, apply targeted treatments (gel bait, bait stations) wherever possible rather than surface sprays, ensure the room is thoroughly ventilated before the baby is brought back in, and confirm re-entry times with the product label and SDS. If in doubt, arrange a treatment time when the family is out and will not return for several hours. Document your risk assessment.

What is the HHSRS and why does it matter to a pest controller?

The Housing Health and Safety Rating System is the framework that local authorities use to assess the condition of rented properties. Hazard Category 1 ratings trigger a duty to act. "Threats of infection" is one of 29 hazard types and encompasses pest infestations. If your survey finds a severe infestation that poses a genuine health risk, particularly to vulnerable occupants, you should advise the customer that an EHO inspection may result in a Category 1 rating and enforcement action against the landlord. This is not a threat — it is professional honesty that protects you and helps the customer understand the seriousness of the situation.

What happens if a tenant complains that my treatment made them ill?

Document your COSHH assessment, PPE used, products applied, and customer communications thoroughly. If you followed the product label and SDS, communicated re-entry times clearly, and your COSHH assessment was appropriate, your professional liability is very limited. Notify your public liability insurer regardless. Report any adverse health incident to the HSE under RIDDOR if it involves a member of the public and results in medical treatment.

Regulations & Standards