What you need to do if you're a letting agent or property manager who holds client money.

Client money protection scheme membership and transparency requirements

Under the Client Money Protection Schemes for Property Agents (Requirement to Belong to a Scheme etc.) Regulations 2019, letting agents and property managers who hold client money must belong to a government approved Client Money Protection scheme (CMP scheme).

Membership of a CMP scheme can enable a landlord or client to be compensated for loss of their money in certain circumstances.

Who needs to join a CMP Scheme

You must be a member of an approved or designated CMP Scheme if you hold client money and:

What client money is

Client money is money you receive as an agent during your letting or property management work, and hold it for another person, for example a landlord client or tenant.  

Client money is any money that doesn't belong to you as a letting agent or property manager.

Examples of client money include:

  • rent
  • holding deposit
  • money paid to the property agent for repairs and maintenance work
  • unprotected tenancy deposits

It's irrelevant how long you hold the client money. It might only be a few hours. If you've received money and hold it on behalf of someone else (a client), you must comply with the regulations and belong to a CMP scheme.

If you do not hold client money, you do not need to join a CMP scheme.

Tenancy deposit

The tenancy deposit:

  • is considered client money in the period between the tenant or relevant person paying it to the agent, and the agent registering it with the authorised deposit scheme
  • is not considered client money once it's protected by an authorised tenancy deposit scheme

What you need to do to comply with the regulations

If you're a letting agent or property manager in relation to housing in England and you hold client money, you must:

  • belong to a government approved CMP Scheme (regulation 3)
  • be transparent about your membership (regulation 4), so that a client: 
    • knows which CMP Scheme you're a member of, and
    • is told of any changes to your membership 

Join an approved or designated CMP scheme (Regulation 3)

There are currently 6 approved CMP schemes for letting agents and property managers:

Be transparent about your membership (Regulation 4)

You must provide evidence of, or information about, your membership of a CMP scheme.  

If the CMP scheme gives a certificate of membership, you must:

  • display your certificate of membership in your premises, where clients can see it
  • publish the certificate on your website
  • give a copy of the certificate, free of charge, to anyone who may reasonably require it
  • tell your clients in writing if there are any changes to your membership within 14 days of the change, for example if you join a different scheme or your membership is revoked
  • give your clients the name and address of any new scheme you join

See our section on publication requirements for a further duty to publish a statement online and in your premises of the details of the CMP scheme you belong to.

If you don't comply with the regulations

If you need to belong to a CMP scheme and you don't, you could receive a financial penalty of up to £30,000.

If you don't comply with any of the transparency requirements, you could receive a financial penalty of up to £5,000 for each breach.

You're not sure if you need to join a CMP scheme

If you're not sure whether you need to be a member of a CMP scheme, contact: 

Property agent checker

Use the property agent checker to check if a letting agent or property manager is registered with an approved redress or client money protection (CMP) scheme.

The information on the website is based on the legislation in force at the time the content was produced. It is not necessarily comprehensive and is subject to revision in the light of further information should there be changes to the legislation referenced here. Only the courts can interpret statutory legislation with any authority. This information provided is not intended to be a definitive guide to, nor substitute for, the relevant law. Independent legal advice should be sought where appropriate.