Why, where, when and what
Plain-English explanation of the law, the background, who it applies to, the timeframes and how Phase 2 changes the operating burden.
Read the legal primerStart with the law: why it exists, where it applies, what changed, when the duties began and what social landlords must be able to evidence. Then use the hub to explore sector examples, IoT evidence, readiness scoring, failure modes and implementation tools.
Independent. Evidence-led. Not legal advice. Not affiliated with government, regulators or any housing provider.
Begin with the legal position, then move into the practical areas where providers need working answers: implementation, evidence, technology and shared sector learning.
Plain-English explanation of the law, the background, who it applies to, the timeframes and how Phase 2 changes the operating burden.
Read the legal primerA more comprehensive assessment across governance, triage, evidence, data, resident communication, IoT and Phase 2 readiness.
Open the assessmentCurated examples, news, commentary and provider activity so the site becomes a living open forum rather than static training material.
Browse the newsfeedHonest guidance on how environmental monitoring can support earlier risk detection, stronger evidence and better board assurance.
Explore IoT evidenceThe hub converts duties into workflows: report, triage, vulnerability review, inspection, written summary, repair, monitoring, follow-up and board assurance.
It asks the uncomfortable question: could your organisation reconstruct the case file, timeline, decisions and resident contact if challenged?
The site invites examples and expert commentary from across housing, law, surveying, environmental health, resident engagement, data and IoT.
Phase 1 began on 27 October 2025 for emergency hazards and damp and mould hazards presenting significant risk. GOV.UK states that regulations are being extended in 2026 to further hazards where significant risk of harm is present, and in 2027 to remaining HHSRS hazards except overcrowding. GOV.UK timeframes
The practical implication is simple: landlords need a repeatable hazard-response operating model, not a damp-and-mould-only project.
Read Phase 2 readinessSend corrections, sector examples, expert commentary, case studies, sponsorship enquiries and IoT/evidence pilots to hello@awaabslaw.org.uk.
The hub is independent and curated. Contributions are reviewed before publication.
Contact the hub