HMO EICR in Canterbury
HMOs in Canterbury are typically inspected on the same five-year EICR cycle as standard rented property, but with the HMO licence from Canterbury City Council specifying it as a licence condition rather than just the PRS regulations. Practical difference: the council follows up on missing certificates more actively, and the inspection scope often includes verification of fire alarm interface circuits and emergency lighting.
HMOs in Canterbury are typically inspected on the same five-year EICR cycle as standard rented property, but with the HMO licence from Canterbury City Council specifying it as a licence condition rather than just the PRS regulations. Practical difference: the council follows up on missing certificates more actively, and the inspection scope often includes verification of fire alarm interface circuits and emergency lighting.
What an EICR involves for HMO
HMO inspection scope is broader than a typical single-let EICR. The consumer unit (or units), every accessible accessory, the supply route, earthing and bonding, every circuit through dead and live testing, and — where they’re hardwired — the fire detection panel feeds and emergency lighting circuits. The deliverable is the standard three-part EICR PDF, sometimes with an addendum specific to the licence-conditions verification Canterbury City Council has stipulated.
When you need this in Canterbury
Common HMO EICR triggers in Canterbury: - Five-yearly cycle on existing licence — certificate approaching expiry - HMO licence renewal — Canterbury City Council asks for current evidence - New HMO conversion — initial EICR on the converted installation - Change of licence holder — incoming landlord audits the compliance file - Tenant turnover with single bedroom voids — opportunistic re-inspection - Canterbury City Council property audit triggered by a tenant complaint - Major works completed (boiler, kitchen, additional bedroom)

What the report contains
Reports come back in the standard EICR format, with HMO-specific annotations where they’re useful (multiple consumer unit identifications, fire alarm circuit verification status, emergency lighting circuit verification status). The PDF is delivered to the landlord or managing agent and is in the format Canterbury City Council accepts for the licence file. Failed reports come with a remedial-work quote alongside, typically expedited because of the licence cycle pressure.
Why book CJA Electrical for your Canterbury EICR
HMO EICR work is technically more involved than single-let work and administratively more complex because of the licence layer. CJA Electrical has done HMO inspections across Canterbury for ten years — comfortable with multiple consumer units, fire panel circuit verification, and the kind of licence-condition coordination that Canterbury City Council typically wants. City & Guilds 2391 qualified, fully insured, same-week appointments typical.

How the inspection runs
HMO-specific process notes: For shared HMOs we’ll typically need access to every let bedroom plus the common parts (kitchen, lounge, bathrooms, hallways). Coordination with each tenant on access is usually easier than trying to do it all on one visit — we’ll often book the inspection across two days for larger properties to fit tenant schedules. Report comes back in single PDF regardless of how many visits the inspection took.
What affects the price
HMO EICR pricing is per property and reflects the broader scope — multiple consumer units, more circuits, more accessories, longer inspection time. Same-day fixed quote on receipt of the property scope (room count, consumer unit count, fire alarm arrangement). No deposit on standard work, payment on certificate.
FAQs
How quickly can Canterbury City Council take action if I miss the EICR cycle?
Canterbury City Council can request the certificate at any time and must receive a copy within seven days of the request. Where no satisfactory certificate exists, they can serve a remedial notice, issue civil penalties (up to £30,000 per breach under the 2020 PRS regs), or initiate licence review proceedings. HMO licence holders are typically followed up more actively than single-let landlords.
Do you handle EICR alongside fire alarm certification?
We handle the EICR side and the fire alarm circuit verification within the EICR scope. The annual fire alarm system test and certification (BS 5839-1 for larger systems) is usually a separate specialist’s job, though we can fit smoke and heat alarms to BS 5839-6 for smaller HMO conversions — see the smoke alarm installation page for detail.
What about emergency lighting in HMO common parts?
HMOs with shared common parts typically need emergency lighting under BS 5266. We treat the emergency lighting circuit verification as part of the EICR but the dedicated emergency lighting installation, testing, and certification is its own service — see the emergency lighting page for detail. Both can be coordinated together for HMO compliance projects.
Can the EICR be done across multiple visits if tenants are difficult?
Yes. For larger HMOs, splitting the inspection across two visits is often the easiest answer to tenant access constraints. The schedule of inspection captures what was checked on which date, and the report itself is issued as a single PDF on completion. Remedial work quoted at the end of the second visit covers the whole property.
Will I need a fresh EICR if I’m adding another bedroom to my HMO?
Yes — adding bedrooms means new circuits, additional accessories, and often a change in licence category. The new work itself gets an Electrical Installation Certificate (EIC) at commissioning, and a fresh EICR on the wider installation is sensible to document the post-conversion state. Canterbury City Council will typically expect both documents at the licence variation stage.
Do you work with HMO managing agents on portfolio compliance?
Yes — and we’d usually prefer to. Single point of contact, batched inspection visits across a portfolio, consistent reporting format, and remedial-work quoting alongside any unsatisfactory reports. See the letting agency page for the full portfolio framework approach.
Does my HMO licence with Canterbury City Council require an EICR?
Yes — almost always. Canterbury City Council typically lists a current satisfactory EICR as a standard condition of the HMO licence, with renewal cycle aligned to the licence renewal cycle. Specific requirements vary by licence type (mandatory, additional, or selective licensing) but a satisfactory EICR is a near-universal expectation. The council will ask to see it on licence renewal and on inspection.
HMO EICR in nearby towns
- HMO EICR in Whitstable — Canterbury
- HMO EICR in Herne Bay — Canterbury
- HMO EICR in Sturry — Canterbury
EICR for other audiences in Canterbury
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