Housing Disrepair in Swansea
If your landlord has failed to maintain your home in Swansea — damp, mould, broken heating, structural damage — you have legal rights to claim compensation. Understand those rights and take action.
Covers
All tenancy types
Legal basis
HFHHA 2018
Report cost
£99
Housing Disrepair in Swansea
Local context and why this matters in Swansea
Across Swansea, housing disrepair claims have increased significantly as tenants become more aware of their legal rights. The combination of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 and the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018 gives tenants in Swansea a powerful legal framework — and our claim report helps you use it effectively.
Swansea's rental market includes a significant proportion of older housing stock — Victorian and Edwardian terraces, inter-war semis, and post-war social housing — all of which are prone to the structural issues that give rise to disrepair claims. Rising damp, penetrating damp from defective pointing or roofing, and inadequate heating systems are among the most frequently reported problems.
The key legal trigger for a compensation claim is notification followed by failure to act. Once you have told your landlord about the problem in writing — by text, email, or letter — and they have not responded or repaired it within a reasonable time, you have grounds to pursue a formal claim. Our claim report organises your evidence and produces a professional pre-action letter that courts, landlords, and councils can act on.
What Is a Housing Disrepair Claim?
A housing disrepair claim is a legal action against your landlord for failing to maintain your home in a fit and habitable condition. Under the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018 and the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, landlords in Swansea are legally required to keep the structure, exterior, and essential services of the property in repair throughout the tenancy. Where they fail to do so after being notified, tenants are entitled to compensation — and in some cases, a court order compelling the repairs.
How to Build Your Disrepair Claim in Swansea
Five steps from identifying the problem to securing compensation.
Notify Your Landlord in Writing
Send a written notification — email, text, or letter — describing the problem clearly. Date it. Keep a copy. This starts the legal clock for their obligation to respond.
Document the Disrepair Thoroughly
Date-stamped photographs, written records of health impacts, receipts for damaged belongings, and records of communications with your landlord. The more evidence, the stronger the claim.
Build a Structured Claim Report
A professional claim report organises your evidence, applies the correct legal framework, and produces a document that courts, landlords, and councils can act on. Claim Builder generates this for you.
Send the Formal Pre-Action Letter
Your claim report becomes a formal pre-action letter — sent to the landlord as a final demand for repair and compensation before court proceedings. Many cases resolve at this stage.
Escalate If Necessary
If the landlord still fails to act, file a claim at the local county court. Small claims (under £10,000) are handled without a barrister and are accessible to any tenant in Swansea.
No solicitor needed
Ready to Take Action on Disrepair in Swansea?
Start with the free claim checker to assess your position — then build your structured claim report. No solicitor required. Takes under 10 minutes.
What's in Your Claim Report
Everything you need — generated instantly from your answers.
Structured Claim Report
A professionally formatted PDF report setting out the disrepair, the notification history, the legal basis for your claim, and the compensation sought.
Pre-Action Letter
A formal letter to your landlord demanding repair and compensation within 21 days — the required step before court proceedings under the Pre-Action Protocol.
Evidence Checklist
A tailored checklist of the evidence you should gather — photographs, communications, medical records, receipts — to support your claim at every stage.
Next Steps Guide
Plain-English guidance on what happens after you send the letter — how to respond to different landlord reactions, and how to escalate to court if needed.
Why Swansea Tenants Use Our Claim Report
Legally Grounded
Every report applies the correct legal framework — the Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) Act 2018, the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, and the Housing Act 2004 HHSRS standards.
Professional Format
Landlords, their insurers, and courts take a structured professional report far more seriously than an informal complaint letter. Our format is designed to prompt action.
Ready in Under 10 Minutes
Answer questions about your property, the disrepair, and your notification history — and download a complete, personalised report instantly.
Fixed Cost — £99
One payment covers the full claim report, pre-action letter, evidence checklist, and next steps guide. No subscription, no hourly rates.
No Solicitor Required
Our report is designed to be used directly by tenants — without legal representation. For complex cases, it also provides an excellent foundation for a solicitor to work from.
All Tenancy Types
Works for private tenancies, assured shorthold tenancies, social housing, and housing association properties. The legal framework applies equally to all.
Ready to Take Action on Disrepair in Swansea?
Start with the free claim checker to assess your position — then build your structured claim report. No solicitor required. Takes under 10 minutes.
Housing Disrepair in Swansea — Your Questions Answered
Common questions about this service in Swansea
Housing Disrepair Advice in Other Cities
Find the same service in nearby cities and towns
Related Services in Swansea
Other legal services available in your area
Legal Disclaimer
This service provides general guidance and does not constitute legal advice. The information on this page is intended to help tenants in Swansea understand their rights and take structured action. Every situation is different — if your case involves complex circumstances or you are unsure at any stage, we recommend seeking advice from a qualified solicitor or contacting Citizens Advice (citizensadvice.org.uk) before proceeding.