HMO Compliance — Bow
HMO Compliance Inspection in Bow
Gas Safe + NICEIC certified HMO compliance inspections in Bow, Tower Hamlets. From £250. CP12, EICR, PAT testing, fire alarm, emergency lighting, smoke and CO alarms, legionella. Same-day written report.
What we cover
All mandatory HMO certificates in one visit
Gas Safety CP12
Annual Gas Safe registered inspection of all gas appliances, flues, and pipework. CP12 certificate issued the same day — a legal requirement for every HMO.
EICR Certificate
Electrical Installation Condition Report by NICEIC-approved engineers. Required every 5 years (or on change of tenancy) for HMOs. Covers all fixed wiring, consumer unit, and earthing.
PAT Testing
Portable Appliance Testing of all landlord-supplied electrical items. Printed pass/fail register for council inspection. Recommended annually for HMOs with multiple occupants.
Fire Alarm Testing
Full L2 fire alarm system test and inspection. Checks every detector, call point, sounder, and panel. Signed fire alarm log updated on completion.
Emergency Lighting Test
Three-hour duration test of all emergency lighting in communal areas and escape routes. Mandatory in HMOs with more than two storeys or five or more occupants.
Smoke & CO Alarm Installation
Supply and fit interlinked smoke alarms on every floor and carbon monoxide detectors in rooms with combustion appliances. Satisfies Smoke and Carbon Monoxide Alarm Regulations 2022.
Initial compliance check
From £250
Full site visit to assess your HMO against current licensing requirements. We identify which certificates are missing or expired, check alarm coverage, review documentation, and produce a written compliance report — same day.
- Written compliance report same day
- Gap analysis against council requirements
- Checklist of certificates needed
- Fixed-price quotation for all outstanding work
Certificates quoted separately
Fixed quotes
Each certificate — CP12, EICR, PAT, fire alarm, emergency lighting — is quoted individually based on your property size and number of appliances. No hidden call-out fees. We combine certificates into a single visit wherever possible to minimise disruption to tenants.
- No call-out or travel surcharges
- Combined visits to cut disruption
- Bulk discount for portfolio landlords
- Invoice with full certificate breakdown
HMO licensing in Bow
What the law requires for HMOs
A House in Multiple Occupation (HMO) is a property rented to three or more tenants from more than one household who share facilities such as a kitchen or bathroom. In England, any HMO with five or more occupants forming two or more households requires a mandatory licence under the Housing Act 2004 — regardless of whether it is in Bow or elsewhere in London.
Many London boroughs also operate additional or selective licensing schemes that capture smaller HMOs — properties let to just three or four unrelated tenants. Before applying for or renewing a licence, landlords must demonstrate that all statutory safety certificates are current. Local housing authorities check this at application stage and can conduct inspections at any time during the licence period.
The mandatory conditions attached to an HMO licence require, as a minimum: a valid gas safety CP12 renewed annually; an Electrical Installation Condition Report (EICR) renewed every five years; working smoke alarms on every storey and carbon monoxide detectors in every room with a combustion appliance; and adequate means of escape from fire. Larger HMOs typically also require a fire detection system graded to British Standard 5839, emergency lighting in all communal escape routes, and annual PAT testing of all landlord-supplied appliances.
Legionella risk assessments are not always a strict licensing condition, but councils increasingly request them — particularly in larger HMOs with storage hot water cylinders or complex cold-water pipe runs where Legionella bacteria could proliferate. A written risk assessment demonstrates duty-of-care compliance under the Health and Safety at Work Act 1974 and COSHH regulations.
Council enforcement and landlord obligations
What triggers an HMO inspection?
Councils can inspect HMOs proactively during routine licensing checks or reactively following a tenant complaint. If an Environmental Health Officer identifies a category 1 hazard — the most serious rating under the Housing Health and Safety Rating System (HHSRS) — the authority is duty-bound to take enforcement action. This can include an improvement notice, prohibition order, emergency remedial action, or prosecution.
Landlords who fail to licence an HMO that requires one face a civil penalty of up to £30,000 under the Housing and Planning Act 2016. Operating an unlicensed HMO also means the landlord cannot serve a valid Section 21 notice to end a tenancy — making possession proceedings impossible until the licence is obtained. Fines for individual certificate failures (expired CP12, missing EICR) typically start at £5,000 per offence and can be issued alongside the penalty for unlicensed operation.
Where a local authority has designated an additional licensing area — which applies in many central and inner-London boroughs — the threshold for licensing drops to three or more occupants. Property managers and letting agents who have management responsibilities for an HMO are jointly liable for licensing compliance alongside the registered owner. Agents must ensure all certificates are in place before accepting a management instruction.
Our HMO compliance inspection covers all of these requirements in a single coordinated visit. We supply a written report setting out the current status of each certificate, identify any deficiencies, and provide a fixed-price quotation to bring the property into full compliance before your next licence renewal date.
HMO compliance Bow
Get your HMO inspection report today
Gas Safe + NICEIC certified. All mandatory HMO certificates covered in one visit. Same-day compliance report. From £250 — fixed-price certificates quoted separately.
Book HMO compliance inspection
Common questions
HMO compliance Bow: frequently asked
What certificates does an HMO need in Bow?
An HMO in Bow, Tower Hamlets requires a Gas Safety Certificate (CP12) annually, an EICR every 5 years, smoke alarms on every floor, and CO alarms in rooms with combustion appliances. Larger properties also need fire alarm testing, emergency lighting checks, PAT testing, and a legionella risk assessment. Our compliance inspection covers all of these in a single visit.
Do you provide HMO compliance inspections in Bow?
Yes — Bow is within Tower Hamlets which we cover fully. Our Gas Safe + NICEIC certified engineers attend Bow for HMO compliance inspections covering all mandatory certificates. Same-day written compliance report issued after every visit.
How often do HMO certificates need to be renewed?
Gas Safety Certificate (CP12): annually. EICR: every 5 years or at change of tenancy. PAT testing: annually for HMOs. Fire alarm and emergency lighting: full annual test with interim checks logged. Legionella risk assessment: reviewed annually or when the system changes.
What happens if a council inspector finds a fault at my HMO?
A council Environmental Health Officer who identifies a category 1 hazard must take enforcement action — which can include an improvement notice, prohibition order, or emergency remedial works at the landlord's expense. Civil penalties can reach £30,000. Our compliance inspection identifies all deficiencies and issues a written report before any council visit, allowing you to remediate proactively.