Landlord EICR in Snodland
Landlord EICR testing in Snodland — fast turnaround for letting agents and private landlords across Tonbridge and Malling.
For Tonbridge and Malling landlords, the Electrical Safety Standards in the Private Rented Sector (England) Regulations 2020 made the 5-yearly EICR legally non-negotiable. Every privately rented home in England needs a satisfactory report at least every five years, plus a fresh one at the start of any new tenancy. CJA Electrical does the inspection, the report, and (separately) any remedial work to clear an unsatisfactory report.
What Landlord EICR actually is
For rental property, the EICR is both a safety inspection and a compliance document. The safety side is what gets tested — the same inspection-and-test process as any EICR. The compliance side is what landlords actually need: documentary evidence, in a format Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council accepts, that the installation meets BS 7671 at the date of inspection. The 2020 PRS regulations require a satisfactory report (no C1 or C2 observations) every five years and at the start of each new tenancy. Reports referencing C3 observations alone still pass. Unsatisfactory reports (C1 or C2 present) trigger a 28-day deadline for remedial work to be completed and a fresh certificate to be issued.
When you need Landlord EICR in Snodland
Two specific triggers apply to landlord EICRs: every five years on a rolling cycle, and at the start of any new tenancy. For most Snodland private rented property, that means the 5-year cycle is the main scheduling driver, with new-tenancy testing slotting in when properties change tenants between cycles. Beyond the regulatory triggers, common voluntary triggers we see in Tonbridge and Malling: a portfolio acquisition (new landlord taking over property where the existing certificate is questionable), a major refurbishment (recircuiting, consumer unit replacement), insurance renewal where the underwriter has asked for a current certificate, and council action where a tenant complaint has triggered an enforcement visit.

Standards and what compliance looks like
The technical standard is BS 7671:2018+A2:2022 — the 18th Edition of the Wiring Regulations with Amendment 2. Any landlord EICR signed off after January 2023 should reference that version. The 2022 amendment introduced changes around surge protection (now required on most domestic installations), arc fault detection in some circumstances, and updated requirements for outdoor and EV charging circuits. For landlord property specifically, the additional layer is the 2020 PRS regulations — the document supplied to tenants needs to be the standard EICR format (BS 7671 Appendix 6) signed by a qualified inspector, with the schedule of inspections and test results attached.
Testing schedule and remedials
On site, landlord EICR testing is non-disruptive — the work is quiet, brief power-downs are limited to 5-10 minutes per circuit, and the testing equipment is non-destructive. Tenants typically don’t need to be home for the whole visit, just to provide access at the start. Testing follows the standard BS 7671 sequence: inspection of the consumer unit and accessories first, then dead testing (continuity, insulation resistance, polarity, ring continuity) on each circuit, then live testing (earth fault loop, RCD operation) once the supply’s restored. Each circuit’s results are recorded individually on the schedule of test results.

Why Snodland property owners book CJA Electrical
Three things matter on landlord EICR work: turnaround (certificate inside 48 hours so the agent or landlord can move on the next step), format (BS 7671 Appendix 6 layout that Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council accepts), and remedial pricing (clear line-by-line quotes against the report so the landlord can decide what to action). All three are why agents and landlords across Tonbridge and Malling keep coming back. Operationally, the things that matter on letting work — fast scheduling, agent-friendly comms, certificates direct to the agent if requested — are all covered as standard.
How the work runs
Step one — the booking. We need property details (address, bedrooms, rough age of installation, any known issues) and the contact for tenant access (agent or tenant direct). Quote confirmed on that call for standard property; site visit first for unusual installations or HMO conversions. Step two — the testing visit. Half a day for most Snodland three-bed rental property; longer for HMOs and larger conversions. Brief power-downs during dead testing flagged in advance to the tenant. Property left exactly as found. Step three — the report. PDF inside 48 hours, supplied to landlord and agent. Remedials, if needed, quoted separately. Re-test scheduled once remedials are complete.
What affects the price
The two factors that move Snodland landlord EICR pricing are circuit count (more circuits = more testing time) and access (single visit with full tenant cooperation versus multiple return visits). For straightforward domestic rental property with cooperative tenant access, the price is well-established and quoted up-front. What we don’t do: deposits, hidden charges, or fees beyond the quoted price. The fixed price is what’s invoiced on completion. Remedials are separate so the EICR price is the EICR price.
FAQs
Do I need a separate certificate for each property in my portfolio?
Yes. Each rental property needs its own EICR — addresses, circuit details, and observations are property-specific. For portfolio landlords with several properties due at the same time, we can schedule the visits efficiently and bulk-deliver the certificates so the agent has the full portfolio in hand at once.
What about EICRs for HMOs?
HMO landlord EICRs follow the same 5-yearly cycle as ordinary rented homes, but typically also align with the HMO licence cycle issued by Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council. HMOs often have shared common-parts circuits (corridor lighting, fire alarm interface, escape route lighting) that get tested separately. We work to whatever the council specifically requires for the licence renewal.
Do I have to do an EICR every 5 years on a rental?
Yes. Since June 2020, every privately rented home in England must have a satisfactory EICR every 5 years and at the start of each new tenancy. The certificate must be supplied to tenants within 28 days of the inspection and to Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council on request within 7 days.
What happens if I don’t have a current EICR?
Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council can serve a remedial notice requiring you to bring the installation into compliance within a fixed timescale, and can issue civil penalties of up to £30,000 for non-compliance. Insurers may also refuse to honour claims related to electrical incidents on properties without current certification.
How is tenant access arranged?
Either through your letting agent or directly with the tenant — whichever is easier for you. We coordinate the visit a few days in advance, confirm the appointment with the tenant, and work around their schedule for the testing visit itself. Most testing visits take a single morning or afternoon.
Can the certificate be sent direct to my agent?
Yes. The PDF can go to you, your letting agent, your council, or all of the above. Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council accepts the standard BS 7671 Appendix 6 format, as do all the major letting agents and managing agents we’ve worked with.
What if the report is unsatisfactory?
An unsatisfactory report just means there are C1 or C2 observations that need clearing before the property is compliant. CJA Electrical can quote separately for the remedial work, and once it’s done a re-test confirms the installation is satisfactory. A fresh certificate is issued documenting the post-remedial state.
Related services in Snodland
- EICR in Snodland
- Emergency in Snodland
- Alarms in Snodland
- Emergency Lighting in Snodland
- Commercial EICR in Snodland
- Outdoor Lighting in Snodland
Landlord EICR in nearby towns
- Landlord EICR in West Malling — Tonbridge and Malling
- Landlord EICR in Kings Hill — Tonbridge and Malling
- Landlord EICR in Larkfield — Maidstone
- Landlord EICR in Aylesford — Maidstone
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a separate certificate for each property in my portfolio?
Yes. Each rental property needs its own EICR — addresses, circuit details, and observations are property-specific. For portfolio landlords with several properties due at the same time, we can schedule the visits efficiently and bulk-deliver the certificates so the agent has the full portfolio in hand at once.
What about EICRs for HMOs?
HMO landlord EICRs follow the same 5-yearly cycle as ordinary rented homes, but typically also align with the HMO licence cycle issued by Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council. HMOs often have shared common-parts circuits (corridor lighting, fire alarm interface, escape route lighting) that get tested separately. We work to whatever the council specifically requires for the licence renewal.
Do I have to do an EICR every 5 years on a rental?
Yes. Since June 2020, every privately rented home in England must have a satisfactory EICR every 5 years and at the start of each new tenancy. The certificate must be supplied to tenants within 28 days of the inspection and to Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council on request within 7 days.
What happens if I don't have a current EICR?
Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council can serve a remedial notice requiring you to bring the installation into compliance within a fixed timescale, and can issue civil penalties of up to £30,000 for non-compliance. Insurers may also refuse to honour claims related to electrical incidents on properties without current certification.
How is tenant access arranged?
Either through your letting agent or directly with the tenant — whichever is easier for you. We coordinate the visit a few days in advance, confirm the appointment with the tenant, and work around their schedule for the testing visit itself. Most testing visits take a single morning or afternoon.
Can the certificate be sent direct to my agent?
Yes. The PDF can go to you, your letting agent, your council, or all of the above. Tonbridge and Malling Borough Council accepts the standard BS 7671 Appendix 6 format, as do all the major letting agents and managing agents we've worked with.
What if the report is unsatisfactory?
An unsatisfactory report just means there are C1 or C2 observations that need clearing before the property is compliant. CJA Electrical can quote separately for the remedial work, and once it's done a re-test confirms the installation is satisfactory. A fresh certificate is issued documenting the post-remedial state.
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