Free for early users

Your landlord is keeping
your money. Here's what to send them.

Answer a few questions and we'll generate a formal deposit dispute letter — built on proven UK legal templates, structured, cited, and ready to send. Free.

Takes 2 minutes
UK law referenced
No solicitor needed
Free during beta
Step 1 of 5
What is the landlord claiming?
Select everything that applies to your situation.
Please select at least one reason.
Step 2 of 5
How much are they deducting?
Enter the total amount the landlord is trying to keep.
£
Please enter the amount being deducted.
Step 3 of 5
Why do you think it's unfair?
Tell us what happened in your own words. Don't worry about legal language.
More detail = stronger letter 0 / 1500
Please describe why the deduction is unfair (50 characters minimum).
Step 4 of 5
What evidence do you have?
Select anything you have — you don't need all of these.
Please select at least one option.
Step 5 of 5
Where should we send your letter?
We'll email you a personalised dispute letter within a few hours.
Please enter a valid email address.

You're all set.

We've received your details. Your personalised deposit dispute letter will be in your inbox within a few hours. Check your spam folder if you don't see it.

How it works

Three steps to challenge your landlord

1

Tell us your situation

Answer five short questions about what your landlord is claiming and why you disagree.

2

We generate your letter

Your answers are merged into a proven UK legal template, citing the Tenancy Deposit Protection Act and your deposit scheme's rules.

3

Send it yourself

Review the letter, then send it directly to your landlord or submit it to your deposit scheme. You stay in control.

Free Guides

Know Your Rights

🏠
Deposit Dispute Letter
How to challenge unfair deductions from your tenancy deposit.
📋
Received a Section 8 Notice?
What it means, whether it's valid, and what to do next.
Not legal advice. UK Rights Hub generates template letters for your own use and review. We are not a law firm and this is not legal advice. If your dispute involves a large sum or complex circumstances, consider seeking advice from Shelter, Citizens Advice, or a solicitor.