Monday, January 6, 2020

Information Of Landlord Gas Safety Certificate

INFORMATION FOR Landlord
Understand your gas safety responsibilities and protect your tenants
As a landlord, it's up to you to make sure your tenants stay safe on the property you're renting. Your legal obligations apply to a wide range of housing occupied under a lease or license. These include:
Residential premises provided for rental by local authorities, housing associations, owners of the private sector, cooperatives and inns.
Rooms in studio accommodation, private households, guesthouses and hotels.
Rented holiday accommodation such as chalets, chalets, apartments, Airborne properties, caravans and narrow boats on inland waterways.
What are your landlord's gas safety responsibilities?
The Gas Safety (Installation and Use) Regulations, 1998 describe your obligations as an owner to ensure that all gas appliances, fittings, chimneys and conduits are safe and operating efficiently. If you rent a property with gas appliances installed, you have three main legal responsibilities:
1. Gas safety checks
To ensure the safety of your tenants, all gas appliances and pipes must be subject to an annual gas safety check - and always by a Gas Safe approved engineer. Once this is done, you will receive a landlord s gas safety certificate with details of all checks performed. It can also be called a CP12 certificate.
You can organize a gas safety check at any time 10 to 12 months after the last check, without affecting the expiration date of the original check. If it is less than 10 or more than 12 months after the last check, you will end up with a new deadline - 12 months from the last check.
The devices belonging to your tenants are not your responsibility - although it is up to you to ensure the safety of the connection conduits, unless they are only connected to the tenants' device.
2. Gas safety record
After the annual gas safety check and receipt of your owner's safety record, you will need to provide a statement of this check to your tenants. By law, a copy of your landlord safety record must be given to your current tenants within 28 days of the gas safety check - and for new tenants, you will need to provide it at the start of their tenancy.
For rental periods of less than 28 days, make sure you have clearly posted a copy of your file on the property. You will need to keep copies of this gas safety audit record until two more audits have been completed.For more info click here

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