Property Licence

Council licensing report

Landlord licensing in Nottingham

Nottingham runs at least one local property licensing scheme. Some rules apply to the whole council. Others apply only to listed streets, wards, or mapped areas, so the postcode alone does not always give a yes-or-no answer.

What landlords need to know

Status

Nottingham

Selective
Additional HMO
Mandatory HMO (national)
Selective licensing
1 active
Additional HMO licensing
1 active
Mandatory HMO licensing
Applies nationally
Local scheme coverage
Listed streets or areas
Active local schemes
2 active schemes
Last checked
22 May 2026

Check a postcode and address in Nottingham

Enter the postcode to confirm the council, then pick the address. If a scheme uses a street list, we check the selected street against it and give a direct yes or no.

Local schemes in Nottingham

Nottingham selective licensing 2023 to 2028

Selective licensing · active · Named areas · 1 Dec 2023 to 30 Nov 2028

Coverage
Named areas
Fee
£950

Nottingham selective licensing applies to most private rented properties in designated areas shown in the council's MyProperty NCC map.

Read more about Nottingham selective licensing

Nottingham citywide additional HMO licensing 2024

Additional HMO licensing · active · Whole council area · 1 Jan 2024 to 31 Dec 2028

Coverage
Whole council area
Fee
£1,607

Nottingham additional HMO licensing is citywide and applies to smaller HMOs occupied by three or more unrelated people forming two or more households.

Read more about Nottingham HMO licensing

How each scheme is scoped in Nottingham

A property licensing scheme is not the same everywhere. A council can designate the whole borough, a handful of wards, a list of streets, or a boundary drawn on a map. Whichever option Nottingham chose changes how confident you can be from the postcode alone.

Nottingham selective licensing 2023 to 2028

This scheme covers the areas listed on the council's designation notice.

Nottingham citywide additional HMO licensing 2024

This scheme covers the whole of Nottingham. Every privately rented property inside the council boundary is in scope.

Common rental setups in Nottingham

The right licence depends on who lives in the property, how the household is structured, and where the property sits in the council area. These are the situations we see most often, with what Nottingham's current rules say about each.

Single tenant in a flat or studio

Licence needed

One adult renting a self-contained flat or a studio with their own kitchen and bathroom.

May need a selective licence if the address sits inside Nottingham's designated scheme area.

Couple renting a whole house

Licence needed

Two people from one household renting an entire house on one tenancy.

May need a selective licence if the address sits inside Nottingham's designated scheme area.

Family renting a whole house

Licence needed

Parents and dependent children from one household renting an entire house.

May need a selective licence if the address sits inside Nottingham's designated scheme area.

Three sharers from different households

Licence needed

Three friends or three unrelated tenants on a joint tenancy, sharing a kitchen and bathroom.

Needs an additional HMO licence anywhere in Nottingham. Mandatory HMO licensing only kicks in at five or more occupiers, so this property is not in scope of the national rule.

Four sharers from different households

Licence needed

Four unrelated tenants sharing a kitchen and bathroom.

Needs an additional HMO licence anywhere in Nottingham. Mandatory HMO licensing only kicks in at five or more occupiers, so this property is not in scope of the national rule.

Five or more sharers from different households

Licence needed

Five or more unrelated tenants sharing a kitchen and bathroom.

Needs a mandatory HMO licence anywhere in England. The five-or-more, two-or-more-households test is national, not council-specific. Nottingham's additional HMO scheme covers the whole council, so its conditions stack on top of the mandatory licence.

Lodger with a live-in landlord

No licence needed

Owner-occupier letting a room to one or two lodgers in their own home.

Letting to a lodger while you live in the property is exempt from HMO licensing in most cases. Selective licensing exemptions also normally cover owner-occupier lets.

Student house of five

Licence needed

Five students from at least two households sharing a converted house.

Needs a mandatory HMO licence anywhere in England. The five-or-more, two-or-more-households test is national, not council-specific. Nottingham's additional HMO scheme covers the whole council, so its conditions stack on top of the mandatory licence.

Buying a property in Nottingham

A property licence does not transfer when a property changes hands. If you buy a let property that needs a licence under Nottingham's rules, the existing licence ends and you need to apply for a new one in your own name. The seller's solicitor should disclose any existing licence and any open enforcement notices.

For conveyancing in Nottingham, ask three things before exchange. First, is the property inside any current selective or additional HMO scheme area. Second, is there an active licence in the seller's name and on what conditions. Third, has the council issued a civil penalty, banning order or rent repayment order against the seller in the last six years.

Owner-occupiers buying to live in the property do not need a licence. The rules only apply when a property is rented out.

Anything on this page that you cannot find an answer to, the council's licensing team can confirm in minutes.