Student Housing
#1 Student Lettings Agency
For students, a deposit is often the biggest single payment they make outside of tuition. For landlords, it’s a safeguard — a buffer against unpaid rent, damaged property, or a tenancy gone wrong.
But somewhere between those two realities lies a lot of misunderstanding.
We’ve all heard the stories: tenants losing deposits over “a bit of dust on the skirting boards,” or landlords footing the bill for repairs that clearly weren’t their responsibility. And every year, the same questions roll in:
“Can they charge me for that?”
“Isn’t that just wear and tear?”
“Why should I pay for something that was already broken?”
So, let’s cut through the noise. At Student Housing, we manage hundreds of tenancies a year — and we follow the law, the evidence, and the principle that deposits should be protected, not weaponised.
Here’s what you can legally deduct. What you can’t. And how to avoid the grey areas in between.
All deposits must be protected under a government-approved tenancy deposit scheme — we use MyDeposits.
These schemes don’t just hold the money — they define what can and can’t be claimed. And that means deductions aren’t just a matter of opinion. They must be:
Justified
Evidence-backed
Proportional
And reasonable in law
Which brings us to the golden rule…
This is the line that most disputes hinge on. Let’s make it simple:
Fair wear and tear is the natural, unavoidable decline in condition from normal use.
Damage is avoidable harm — usually from misuse, neglect or accident.
You can’t charge for scuffed paint from a desk chair, or faded carpets in a south-facing room. But you can deduct for:
Broken furniture
Stains that can’t be cleaned
Holes in walls from DIY shelves
Burn marks or smashed oven doors
Cleaning that goes well beyond what’s reasonable
We don’t guess. We document.
Every property gets a full check-in and check-out inspection. And we’re not talking a few phone photos — we’re talking:
100+ page reports
1,000+ timestamped photos
Every room, fixture and fitting recorded
It’s not just about protecting landlords. It’s about giving tenants a clear, fair comparison of how they left the property vs how they received it.
Professional cleaning after fridges were left full, bins overflowing, and mould in bathrooms
Key replacement when entire sets went missing (yes, we change the locks)
Broken drawers, cracked tiles, and snapped bed frames from misuse
Garden clearance after neglected outdoor spaces grew into jungles
Unpaid rent, where tenants left early without notice
Each one logged. Each one priced. Each one explained.
And just as important — we don’t deduct for:
Worn carpets (If within normal use)
Minor scuffs on walls (In high traffic areas)
Loose handles or light cosmetic wear
Anything that was already broken or documented at check-in
Because that’s what wear and tear looks like. And that’s what a deposit isn’t there to cover.
Sometimes, tenants disagree with deductions — and that’s okay.
We always aim to resolve things informally, quickly, and fairly. The moment we think a deduction needs to be made, we:
Share the report
Show the evidence
Explain the reasoning
Only if we can’t agree does it go to MyDeposits for adjudication. But most never need to get that far — because when both sides are clear, it’s rare for things to escalate.
Your deposit isn’t a penalty. It’s not a threat. And it shouldn’t be a mystery.
Handled properly, it protects both the landlord and the tenant. And at Student Housing, we’re proud to lead with evidence, not assumptions. With transparency, not tactics.
That’s why most of our students leave with their full deposit back — and why our landlords trust us to manage deductions fairly.
👉 Got questions about deposit returns or want to see an example check-out report? Get in touch — we’re here to help.
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#1 Student Lettings Agency
Student Housing is a top-rated student lettings agency offering fully furnished, bills-included accommodation across Lincoln, Nottingham, and Hull. Run by former students, we provide hassle-free, transparent housing tailored for university life.