When Welsh Government enacted The Renting Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) (Wales) Regulations 2022 in December 2022, they introduced a immediate legal requirement for carbon monoxide alarms to be installed in rented properties in Wales.
The Regulations state that – during each period of occupation – a carbon monoxide alarm is required in each room containing a gas appliance, an oil-fired combustion appliance or a solid fuel burning combustion appliance. This includes rooms with gas boilers and/or gas cookers.
"Room" includes halls, landings and corridors, whilst "period of occupation" is defined as starting with the occupation date of the contract and ending when the contract ends.
The Regulations do not specify that the carbon monoxide alarm must be of a certain type, meaning mains-wired and battery-operated alarms are acceptable.
CPS Homes recommends that landlords install a mains-wired, combined smoke/heat and carbon monoxide alarm(s), as it means it will be checked at the same time as the fire alarm system. We've seen standalone carbon monoxide alarms get put in drawers if they start beeping due to running low on battery or they're close to expiry, so having it mains-wired will avoid this.
If a landlord chooses to go with a battery-operated alarm, we would strongly suggest that they fitted to a fixture.
Placement and maintenance of carbon monoxide alarms
Smoke alarms are normally placed on ceilings because heat and smoke rises, but this isn’t necessarily the best place to install carbon monoxide alarms as the concentration of the gas could reach dangerous levels before reaching ceiling height. As such, carbon monoxide alarms are usually installed lower than smoke alarms. We cover this topic and more in our 'where should carbon monoxide alarms be positioned?' article.
Landlords are required to ensure each alarm remains in proper working order during each period of occupation, which includes noting its expiry date. An expired alarm is unlikely to meet the "proper working order" requirement. Bear in mind that carbon monoxide sensors are typically more fragile than those within smoke alarms, so usually need to be replaced more regularly.
Carbon monoxide cannot be seen, smelt nor tasted, but it can injure and kill quickly, so the worst case scenario speaks for itself.
Additionally, the legislation states that a property will be deemed unfit for human habitation if there isn’t a carbon monoxide alarm installed in a room which requires one. As such, it will be incredibly difficult for a landlord to claim that rent is due for this 'uninhabitable' period, in our view.
Want to know more? Head on over to the Renting Homes (Fitness for Human Habitation) (Wales) Regulations 2022 or Welsh Government’s accompanying guidance.
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The information contained within this article was correct at the date of publishing and is not guaranteed to remain correct in the present day.