SStratum APIs

How does MEES compliance work for UK letting agents in 2025?

The Minimum Energy Efficiency Standard (MEES) regulation requires UK rented residential property to hold an EPC of band E or better before it can be let. The rule has been in force since 2018-04-01 for new tenancies and 2020-04-01 for all existing tenancies. The 2030 minimum-C rule (currently confirmed-policy) lifts the floor to band C from 2030-04-01 for domestic property and 2030-10-01 for commercial property.

Penalty exposure runs to the landlord: £30,000 per property let in breach for domestic, £150,000 for non-domestic. Letting agents carry shared responsibility under the Tenant Fees Act + their AML obligations; agents that knowingly market or list a non-compliant property carry their own enforcement exposure.

Exemptions exist for listed buildings, properties where the necessary improvements would have a 7-year payback period or longer, and properties where the tenant or third party refuses consent. Each exemption must be registered on the PRS Exemptions Register with supporting evidence; an unregistered exemption claim is not a defence at enforcement.

For letting agents, the practical workflow: pull the EPC for every property at instruction; check the MEES verdict via the EPC + MEES Verdict API at /v1/epc/postcode/{postcode}; flag any property at band F or G as unlettable; flag band D + E as on-the-2030-runway. The Stratum letting-agent suite endpoint bundles MEES into the same audit-grade PDF as the sanctions screen.

Source: MHCLG MEES Regulations Guidance

Last updated 2026-05-06.

How does MEES compliance work for UK letting agents in 2025? | Stratum Knowledge | Stratum APIs