Rental scams in the UK cluster around the same five or six moves. Once you know the shape, you can clear a suspicious listing in under a minute.

The five red flags

  1. The price is 20%+ below comparable listings. Scammers don't win on charm. They win on urgency, and urgency starts with a price that makes you skip diligence.
  2. The landlord is abroad and can't meet. Often framed sympathetically — I've moved for work, my agent will handle it. The "agent" is the same person. The keys are in a lockbox. They never are.
  3. You're asked to transfer a deposit before viewing. No legitimate landlord in the UK requires this. Not one.
  4. The listing photos are watermarked, low-res, or reverse-image searchable. Right-click, "search image with Google". If the same flat is on Rightmove in Manchester and SpareRoom in Bristol at half the price, it's neither.
  5. Payment is by bank transfer only, to a personal account. Legitimate agents use client accounts and accept cards. Personal-account transfers are irreversible.

What a legitimate process actually looks like

  • You view the property in person, or via a live video call where you can direct the camera.
  • You see the landlord's ID or the agent's registration (in England, Propertymark or equivalent).
  • The landlord gives you the prescribed information for the deposit scheme within 30 days.
  • Your tenancy agreement is on a named template (usually AST — Assured Shorthold Tenancy in England and Wales; different in Scotland).
  • The holding deposit is capped at one week's rent and is refundable if the landlord pulls out.

If you think you've been scammed

  • Report to Action Fraud immediately. Keep your crime reference number.
  • Call your bank. Faster Payments can sometimes be recalled if the receiving account is flagged within hours.
  • Report the listing. Rightmove, Zoopla, SpareRoom, and OpenRent all have fraud teams. Scammers reuse photos; your report helps the next person.

The emotional pattern is worth knowing too. Scammers cultivate a light sense of panic — another viewer is interested, I need to know by tonight. Every legitimate landlord in Britain has waited a week for a reference check. Yours can too.

The adjacent scam: the guarantor service

If you don't have a UK guarantor, some landlords ask for a paid third-party service (Housing Hand, etc.). These are legitimate, but expensive — typically 75–100% of a month's rent. Before you pay, ask whether the landlord will accept 6 months' rent up front instead. Many will; the cost is the same, and the money is yours.