What Is a Section 8 Notice?
A Section 8 notice— formally a “Notice Seeking Possession” — is the legal document a private landlord in England must serve on a tenant before applying to the county court for a possession order. It is the first compulsory step in any grounds-based eviction and is governed by Section 8 of the Housing Act 1988.
The notice must be served on the prescribed Form 3A(the old Form 3 became invalid on 1 May 2026 under the Renters' Rights Act 2025). It must cite at least one valid ground from Schedule 2 of the Housing Act 1988 and must give the tenant the minimum notice period applicable to that ground.
Critically, the notice does not end the tenancy. It is a formal warning that the landlord intends to apply for possession. If the tenant does not vacate voluntarily by the expiry date, the landlord must file a possession claim with the county court. For Birmingham landlords, that court is Birmingham County Court.
🏛 Why Section 8 is now the only route for Birmingham landlords
Section 21 “no-fault” eviction was abolished across England from 1 May 2026 under the Renters' Rights Act 2025. Birmingham landlords can no longer serve a Section 21 notice. Every possession claim must now be based on a valid Section 8 ground.