Council guide · South East

HMO licensing in Portsmouth

Verified by a human · 11 July 2026

Do you need an HMO licence in Portsmouth?

You need a mandatory HMO licence if your Portsmouth property houses 5 or more people from 2 or more households sharing facilities. Portsmouth also runs an additional licensing scheme, so smaller HMOs may need a licence too. Check the scheme boundary before assuming a 3–4 person HMO is exempt.

New licence fee
£1,257
council fee schedule
Licence term
5 years
renewals £1,191
Schemes in force
2 of 3
mandatory + 1 more
Unlicensed exposure
£30,000
civil penalty per offence

Licensing schemes in force

In force

Mandatory HMO licensing

Applies district-wide to HMOs with 5+ occupants forming 2+ households. National scheme under the Housing Act 2004, Part 2. It has no end date and never lapses.

In force

Additional licensing

Portsmouth runs an additional licensing scheme covering smaller HMOs. Check whether your property falls inside the designated area.

Not in force

Selective licensing

No selective scheme is in force. Selective licensing covers all privately rented homes in a designated area, not just HMOs.

Council summary: Mandatory licensing (Houses in Multiple Occupation). Additional HMO Licence: in force.

Article 4 direction

In force

An Article 4 direction removes permitted development rights for HMO conversion in part or all of Portsmouth. Converting a family home (C3) to a small HMO (C4) needs planning permission inside the direction area. Large HMOs of 7+ occupants are sui generis and always need permission.

Schedule 2, Part 3, Class I(b)

In Portsmouth a specific direction has been introduced, an 'Article 4 Direction. This means planning permission is required for all new HMOs. In most other parts of the country a homeowner can change a family dwelling into an HMO without planning permission. This is not the case in Portsmouth.

Licence fees (2026)

ApplicationFee
New licence£1,257
Renewal£1,191
Validity5 years

Many councils split payment into two stages following the Gaskin ruling. The figures above are totals.

Portsmouth licensing area© OpenStreetMap contributors

Track your Portsmouth HMO

HMOJO maps these rules onto your actual property, room by room, and reminds you before anything lapses. Free for your first property.

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Data key
Human-reviewed council data
AI-sourced, not yet reviewed
National average (indicative)

Room sizes and amenity standards

StandardRequirementSource
Bedroom, 1 adult6.51 minimumNational (mandatory condition)
Bedroom, 2 adults10.22 minimumNational (mandatory condition)
Bedroom, child under 104.64 minimumNational (mandatory condition)

Local standards are where councils differ most, and they change without notice. Confirm with Portsmouth council before letting a room.

What you need to apply

  • Gas safety certificate (CP12), current
  • Electrical installation condition report (EICR), within 5 years
  • Fire alarm and emergency lighting test certificates
  • Floor plan with room sizes marked
  • Fit and proper person declaration
  • Energy performance certificate (EPC), E or above
Apply on the Portsmouth council website

What changed

  • Page verified against current council sources.
  • Renters' Rights Act commencement. Periodic tenancies noted in guidance.

Portsmouth HMO questions, answered plainly

Do I need an HMO licence in Portsmouth?+

You need a mandatory HMO licence if your Portsmouth property houses 5 or more people from 2 or more households sharing facilities. This is the England-wide mandatory rule under the Housing Act 2004. Portsmouth also runs an additional licensing scheme, so smaller HMOs may need a licence too. Check the scheme boundary before assuming a 3–4 person HMO is exempt. Confirm the current position with the council before accepting tenants.

How much does an HMO licence cost in Portsmouth?+

A new mandatory HMO licence in Portsmouth costs £1,257, and renewal costs £1,191. The licence runs for 5 years. Fees change with council budgets, so confirm before applying.

Does Portsmouth have an Article 4 direction for HMOs?+

Yes. An Article 4 direction is in force in Portsmouth (or part of it), which means planning permission is required to convert a family home (C3) to a small HMO (C4, up to 6 occupants). Check the exact boundary with the planning department, because directions often cover specific wards rather than the whole district.

What are the minimum room sizes for an HMO in Portsmouth?+

National minimums apply: 6.51m² for one adult, 10.22m² for two adults, and 4.64m² for a child under 10. Rooms under 4.64m² cannot be used for sleeping. Portsmouth may also apply local amenity standards for kitchens and bathrooms, so check before letting.

What happens if I run an unlicensed HMO in Portsmouth?+

Operating a licensable HMO without a licence is an offence under section 72 of the Housing Act 2004. The council can prosecute (unlimited fine) or issue a civil penalty of up to £30,000 per offence. Tenants can claim back up to 12 months of rent through a Rent Repayment Order, and Section 21 notices are invalid while the property is unlicensed.

Neighbouring councils

Know where your Portsmouth HMO stands.

HMOJO maps these rules onto your actual property, room by room, and reminds you before anything lapses. Free for your first property.

Sources

  1. Portsmouth council HMO licensing pages (checked 11 July 2026)
  2. Housing Act 2004, Part 2 (mandatory licensing framework)
  3. Licensing of HMOs (Mandatory Conditions) Regulations 2018 (room sizes)

HMOJO surfaces licensing information and shows its sources. It is not legal advice and we never certify that a property is compliant. Rules change, so confirm with Portsmouth council or a qualified professional before acting.