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.