Tips & Guides

How to Choose the Right Letting Agent

A good letting agent can save you significant time and protect you from costly mistakes. A bad one can cost you money, damage your property, and create legal headaches. With thousands of letting agents operating across the UK, choosing the right one requires careful evaluation.

This guide covers the different service levels, typical fee structures, essential credentials to check, and the key questions every landlord should ask before signing an agency agreement.

Service Levels: What Are You Paying For?

Tenant-Find Only

The agent advertises your property, conducts viewings, references prospective tenants, and prepares the tenancy agreement. Once the tenant moves in, you manage the property yourself. This is the cheapest option, typically costing one month's rent or a percentage equivalent.

Tenant-find only suits landlords who live near their property, have the time and knowledge to manage tenancies themselves, and are comfortable handling maintenance requests, rent collection, and compliance. Using a property management app alongside a tenant-find service gives you the best of both worlds: professional tenant sourcing with the cost savings of self-management.

Rent Collection

In addition to finding tenants, the agent collects rent on your behalf and chases arrears. You remain responsible for maintenance, inspections, and compliance. This middle-ground option typically costs 8-12% of the monthly rent.

Full Management

The agent handles everything: tenant finding, rent collection, maintenance coordination, inspections, compliance management, and dispute resolution. This is the most expensive option at 10-15% of monthly rent, but it gives you a largely hands-off experience.

Full management is worth considering if you live far from the property, own multiple properties across different areas, or simply prefer to treat your portfolio as a passive investment. However, you should still track your finances independently using software like LandlordGuru, as relying entirely on an agent for financial oversight is risky.

Essential Credentials to Check

Understanding Fee Structures

Agent fees vary significantly. Before committing, get a full written breakdown of all charges. Common fees to ask about include:

All agent fees are allowable expenses that you can deduct from your rental income for tax purposes.

Questions to Ask Before Signing

  1. How many properties do you currently manage in this area?
  2. What is your average void period between tenancies?
  3. How do you market properties? Which portals do you use?
  4. What referencing process do you use for prospective tenants?
  5. How quickly do you respond to tenant maintenance requests?
  6. Do you have an approved contractor list, and can I see it?
  7. What is your process for Right to Rent checks?
  8. How do you handle deposit protection?
  9. What financial reports do you provide, and how often?
  10. What is the minimum contract term, and what notice is required to leave?

Red Flags to Watch For

Self-Management as an Alternative

With modern property management software, many landlords find they can manage their own properties effectively, saving the 10-15% management fee. LandlordGuru handles rent tracking, expense management, MTD compliance, document storage, and tenant management. If you live near your properties and are willing to invest a few hours per month, self-management with the right tools can be the most cost-effective approach.

Self-Manage Like a Pro

LandlordGuru gives you the tools to manage your portfolio yourself, saving thousands in agent fees while staying fully compliant.

Start Free — No Card Required