About
One statutory notice, done properly.
Noticr is an independent, specialist tool for Section 13 rent increases in England — built on the belief that a narrow legal mechanism deserves software that takes it seriously.
Most rent increase notices fail for boring reasons: a date that doesn't align with the rent period, an out-of-date form, a notice period counted wrongly. The rules are knowable — section 13 of the Housing Act 1988, the prescribed Form 4A, and from 1 May 2026 the Renters' Rights Act 2025 — but they are precise, and precision is what generic templates and memory get wrong.
Noticr was built to close that gap. It is operated by Noticr Compliance Ltd, a UK company, and it does one thing: apply the statutory rules to your tenancy, draft the form, and keep the record. The free guides exist for the same reason — most of what landlords and tenants find online about Section 13 is vague or out of date, and the statute deserves better explainers.
One notice, done properly
Noticr does not try to be an everything-platform. It exists for a single statutory mechanism — the Section 13 rent increase — and goes deeper on it than a general tool can: the 52- and 53-week intervals, period alignment after Mooney v Whiteland, the prescribed Form 4A fields, and the Renters' Rights Act 2025 changes.
England only, on purpose
Rent increase law differs across the UK's nations. Rather than approximate four jurisdictions, Noticr covers private residential tenancies in England and says so on every page. If your property is elsewhere, this is not the tool for you — and we would rather tell you that than guess.
A tool, not a law firm
Nothing Noticr produces is legal advice. Every calculation is checked against the statute and recorded to an audit trail, but you review, sign, and serve the notice. Where the law is genuinely uncertain, the guides say so instead of papering over it.
Show the working
Every date and figure Noticr produces is traceable to a statutory rule, and every step is logged. If a rent increase is ever challenged at the First-tier Tribunal, you should be able to show exactly what was calculated, when, and why.