How-to set up your first social housing home 

Getting the keys to your own place for the first time is a big step. It can feel exciting, scary, overwhelming, or all three. You’re not expected to know everything already, and most people learn this step by step. This guide focuses on the important basics first, then builds from there.

The step-by-step process


How-to set up your first social housing home 

Getting the keys to your own place for the first time is a big step. It can feel exciting, scary, overwhelming, or all three. You’re not expected to know everything already, and most people learn this step by step. This guide focuses on the important basics first, then builds from there.

1. Move-in day: the essentials

 

As soon as you get your keys, do these three things to protect yourself and your money:

  • The inspection: Check every room. Test the taps, lights, and heating. Take photos of any damage and report it to your landlord immediately so you aren’t blamed for it later.
  • Meter readings: Write down the numbers on your gas and electricity meters, and water meter if you have one. Give these to the suppliers so you only pay for what you use.
  • Safety check: Test your smoke alarms and make sure you know your fire exit route. Never block hallways or shared corridors with your things.

2. Money and paperwork

 

Getting your bills organised early prevents stress later on.

  • Rent is priority: Your home depends on it. Set up a Direct Debit or standing order. If you have any trouble paying or a delay in benefits, tell your landlord right away as they can usually help if they know early.
  • Council tax: If you’re the only eligible adult in your home, apply for the 25% single person discount. If your income is low, check if you qualify for a reduction.
  • Utilities: Contact energy and water companies to put bills in your name.
  • Broadband and phone: Find out about cheaper social tariffs from Ofcom for people on benefits like Universal Credit.
  • TV licence: You need a licence if you watch or record live TV on any channel (on a TV, laptop, or phone) or use BBC iPlayer. If you don’t watch live TV or use iPlayer, let TV Licensing know so they don’t send you letters.
  • Keep a file: It helps to keep important information together in one place, such as your tenancy agreement, landlord contact details, repair reference numbers, and copies of emails or letters. Having these ready makes things much easier if you ever need to ask your landlord questions or report a problem.

3. Your rights and responsibilities

 

Your tenancy agreement is a legal contract between you and your landlord.

 

The landlord’s job:

  • Keep the building safe and the structure (roof, walls, windows) in good repair.
  • Ensure the heating, hot water, plumbing, and electrics work.
  • Deal with damp or mould that isn’t caused by normal daily use of the home.
  • Give you notice before entering your home (apart from in an emergency).

 

Your job:

  • Pay your rent on time and follow the tenancy rules.
  • Be a good neighbour by keeping noise down, especially at night.
  • Report problems as soon as you see them.
  • Handle small basics yourself, like changing lightbulbs.

 

Also your tenancy agreement agreement will have rules about:

  • Pets
  • Decorating
  • Someone moving in with you
  • Running a business from home
  • Subletting

Always ask first if you’re unsure.

4: Living near other people 

 

Most social housing is in shared buildings or close communities. Having your own tenancy means you’re now the person responsible for how you manage things with neighbours.

  • Keep noise reasonable, especially late at night.
  • Treat shared areas with respect.
  • If there is a problem with your neighbour which cannot be settled amicably, report it to your landlord.

Good neighbour relationships make life much easier.

Inspiration: Real home journeys 

 

Once the basics are sorted, you can focus on making your place comfortable and personal. These creators share real experiences of improving and decorating on a budget:

 

@alexandremiwren — improving and styling her council home

Instagram / TikTok

 

@herds__house — gradual decorating in an ex-council home

Instagram / TikTok

 

@diaryofmy_home_life — step-by-step DIY projects

Instagram / TikTok

 

Search tip — try hashtags like #councilhouse, #renterfriendly, or #budgetdecor.

 

Check the rules: Before doing home improvements check your tenancy agreement or ask your housing officer about the rules, and see our A-Z page. If your home doesn’t have a broadband connection and an engineer needs to drill a hole for a cable, you must get written permission from your landlord first.

Help, advice, and rights for young tenants 

 

A-Z of social housing — Short guides explaining common social housing issues

 

Ofcom — Social tariffs for broadband and phone

 

Centrepoint — Housing support for under-25s

 

Shelter — Housing rights and advice

 

The Mix — Support for under-25s

First-week checklist 

 

  • Took meter readings
  • Reported any damage
  • Set up rent payment
  • Registered for council tax
  • Saved landlord contacts
  • Tested smoke alarms
  • Checked heating works

 

Use our interactive checklist to tick off tasks as you go

Final reminder 

 

You don’t have to have everything sorted straight away. You don’t have to know all the rules. Everyone learns this over time.

 

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