MORE than 200 Scottish landlords have been found in breach of deposit protection laws in 18 months, according to SafeDeposits Scotland.
Some £186,657 has been repaid to tenants after they took landlords to the First-tier Tribunal for Scotland.
Since 2012, landlords in Scotland that take a deposit from their tenant have been legally required to lodge the money with one of three government-approved schemes within 30 working days of the tenancy commencing.
Failure to do so can result in fines of up to three times the deposit value.
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Analysis of tribunal papers by SafeDeposits Scotland has found that since it began hearing cases of non-compliance with deposit protection at the end of 2017, the equivalent of more than £900 per case had been paid out to tenants.
Victoria Smith, chief operating officer at SafeDeposits Scotland, said: “Deposit protection legislation is designed to protect all parties involved in the private rented sector and costs landlords nothing to comply with. The schemes also offer free and impartial adjudication services to ensure that any deductions from deposits are fair and can be scrutinised.
“We believe that the overwhelming majority of landlords operate within the rules, but the findings from our research into the first 18 months of the First-tier Tribunal demonstrates that there are some out there who don’t.
“In most of the cases we’ve looked at, the landlord has not acted out of malice, but was either simply unaware of the legislation or forgot, however, that does not reassure tenants or save landlords from fines.
“Landlords must protect a tenant’s deposit within 30 working days of receiving it with a government-approved scheme like SafeDeposits Scotland. Tenants should also receive confirmation from landlords about which scheme their deposit is with.
“If you are unsure of your rights and responsibilities – either as a tenant or landlord – you can contact our Glasgow-based support team or visit our website.”
The largest award was made to tenants renting a property in Edinburgh, where the landlord was ordered to pay out £3,937.50, and the lowest was £50 for a property in Hamilton.
Rented properties in Glasgow accounted for the greatest number of cases heard by the tribunal, closely followed by Edinburgh, with 38 and 37 cases respectively.
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