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  • July 21, 2021

IS YOUR LETTING AGENT LEGIT?

Janice Molloy

Janice Molloy

Over 20 years of Residential Property Letting and sales experience within the local market of Ayrshire

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The lettings sector used to be the Wild West of the property market, with a small group of unscrupulous agents giving the industry a bad name.

Thankfully, the introduction of stricter regulations in recent years has sent many cowboy agents riding off into the sunset. 

But no industry is perfect, and landlords and tenants still need to be wary of rogue operators.

If you’re looking to do business with a letting agent, one of the first things you should check is that they are a member of a client money protection scheme (CMPS).

By law, all letting agents in Scotland who handle ‘client money’ – in other words, hold rent, maintenance funds or holding deposits on behalf of customers – must be a member of a CMPS. (Note: this is different to a tenant deposit scheme, which agents should also utilise.)

A CMPS is basically an insurance policy. It means that if an agent goes bust or does a runner while holding funds on behalf of clients, the landlords and tenants affected receive compensation. (This didn’t always happen in the old days.)

How can I tell if an agent is a member of a CMPS?                                        

There are six approved CMPSs: Client Money Protect, Money Shield, Propertymark, RICS, Safeagent (previously NALS), and UKALA Client Money Protection.

For the record, here at Parkview Property Ltd, we’re members of Client Money Protection.

Agents must display details of their CMPS membership on their website and in their office. 

Always verify an agent’s membership claim by cross-checking with the relevant CMPS (you can do this online in minutes).

It’s good practice

If an agent gives you a blank look or the run-around when you ask about their CMPS membership, alarm bells should ring.

A good letting agent will have no trouble answering the question (and be impressed by your industry knowledge).

An agent who isn’t a member of a CMPS can be fined up to £30,000. Local authorities, through their Trading Standards operations, enforce these rules.

From all of us here at Parkview Property, stay safe and thanks for reading

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Copyright 2021. Parkview Property Services (Scotland) Limited.

Parkview Property Services (Scotland) Ltd trading as Parkview Property. Registered in Scotland (SC607058) and authorised by the Scottish Letting Agent Register (LARN2010001) 

Property Redress Scheme authorised by National Trading Standards (Estate & Letting Agency) and Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government: PRS027161

ICO Reference number: ZB01787

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