UK property management is a business of small deadlines. Every tenancy has a dozen of them. Every property has its own compliance clock ticking. Every landlord has expectations that need managing, not meeting.
When we started looking at where AI fits, the honest answer was: mostly in the inbox and the paperwork. Here’s where we’ve seen it actually work.
1. Compliance tracking and renewal nudges
Every managed property has EICRs, gas safety certificates, EPCs, PAT tests, smoke alarm checks, and (under the Renters’ Rights Act 2025) a growing list of obligations that vary by council.
Tracking these in a spreadsheet is how you miss one. Tracking them in an AI-powered assistant that reads every incoming certificate, extracts the expiry date, and schedules the renewal nudge is how you stop missing them.
One agency we spoke to spent two days every quarter going through renewal spreadsheets. After the automation shipped, they got that time back and caught three upcoming expiries they would have missed in the old process.
2. Tenancy correspondence drafting
Tenants ask the same questions. So do landlords. “When’s my deposit being returned?” “Why has my rent gone up by 3.2%?” “Am I allowed to keep a cat?”
A grounded assistant with read-access to the tenancy record and a short policy document can draft a response in the agent’s own tone, for the agent to review and send. Not “AI chatbot replies to tenant” — that’s a terrible idea. Just drafting the reply the agent would have written anyway, in ten seconds instead of four minutes.
The measurable win isn’t speed. It’s that the agent now sits on far fewer half-written replies at the end of the day.
3. Deposit disputes and Section 13 preparation
The paperwork around deposit disputes and rent reviews is the most unloved work in the office. It’s also where getting the numbers wrong costs money.
AI that reads the tenancy agreement, cross-references Rightmove comparables for the postcode and property type, and drafts the Section 13 notice with the supporting evidence attached — that’s not replacing the agent. That’s removing the “find the comparables and paste them into a table” step they hate.
We’ve built versions of this for clients and the only thing they change is the tone of the covering letter. The numbers survive review.
What we’d leave alone
Live tenant chat on public-facing sites. We’ve seen letting agents try this. It ends badly within a month. Tenants ask deeply specific questions (“is the boiler in flat 3B the one that needs replacement?”) that require facts the AI doesn’t have. Being confidently wrong in a tenancy conversation is how you end up in ombudsman proceedings.
Keep the public chat widget as a lead capture tool. Keep the AI behind the scenes, drafting what the human sends.
Where to start
If you manage more than 50 units and still track compliance in a spreadsheet, that’s the first place. Pay yourself back in a month, use the freed time on everything else.
Talk to us if you want to walk through your specific setup.