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Very polite reply mulderpf.mulderpf wrote:This might come back to bite you later on. Read your tenancy agreement to see who is responsible for this. If your tenancy agreement doesn't explicitly say, then it is more than likely your responsibility to pay this (as it is firstly the responsibility of the occupier of a property to pay unless stated otherwise).
While they may not know who you are right now, once your landlord finds out about the unpaid council tax, he can then let the council know who actually occupied the property and the council can start proceedings against you. And so on and so on...and it may very well not affect you when extending, but what about later down the line when you want to apply for ILR?
Just pay it...
Agreed. If the tenancy agreement says that the council tax is included in the rent or the council tax is paid by the landlord, then there should not be any problem at all.MPI wrote:well I don't agree with these remarks. If you check current rental properties on the market , you could see huge number of all inclusive offers by property owners . Reason be market is highly competitive and owners try to attact potential tennants . Therefore if it's clearly stated in the agreement that coucil tax is included in the rent , then there is no responsibility on tennants whatsoever.
I have never heard or read a single case in extensions or ILR where council taxes are questioned or required, so don't think above information is accurate.
1. Most lease agreements where you lease the entire house, the tenant is responsible for the council tax. It is up to the OCCUPIER, not the owner to find out who is responsible. If it is not stated in the lease, the occupier is responsible. If it is leasing a room, you are more than likely not responsible for the council tax (if it is directly from a landlord, house shares usually split the council tax, but it's still up to the tenants, not the owner).MPI wrote:well I don't agree with these remarks. If you check current rental properties on the market , you could see huge number of all inclusive offers by property owners . Reason be market is highly competitive and owners try to attact potential tennants . Therefore if it's clearly stated in the agreement that coucil tax is included in the rent , then there is no responsibility on tennants whatsoever.
I have never heard or read a single case in extensions or ILR where council taxes are questioned or required, so don't think above information is accurate.
In this case the owner is not resident at the property, so you go down the ladder you end up with the tenant being the liable person.Usually, the person living in a property will be the liable person, but sometimes it will be the owner of the property who will be liable to pay.
...
The hierarchy of liability is:
* a resident owner-occupier who owns either the leasehold or freehold of all or part of the property
* a resident tenant
* a resident who lives in the property and who is a licensee. This means that they are not a tenant, but have permission to stay there
any resident living in the property, for example, a squatter
* an owner of the property where no one is resident.