The festive period trap
Moving house during Christmas sounds convenient - time off work, family available to help, and a quieter lettings market. But here’s the truth tenants discover too late: that “quieter market” cuts both ways. There are fewer available properties, reduced staff at letting agencies, tradespeople on holiday, and unexpected costs appearing exactly when finances are at their tightest.
Tenants who manage Christmas moves successfully aren’t lucky - they’re prepared for the realities of the most disruptive moving window of the year.
The notice period nobody calculates properly
Notice periods don’t pause for Christmas. If your tenancy ends January 15th, the legally required notice includes Christmas Day, Boxing Day, and New Year’s Day - days when absolutely nothing moves in the rental sector. Need your deposit back quickly for your next place? Every closed working day delays it.
The real solution: serve notice based on how the festive period actually works. A “one-month notice” often requires six weeks of real processing time once holiday closures are factored in.
The inventory timing that protects your deposit
A December 23rd checkout inspection sounds efficient - it’s a trap. Inspectors rush to finish work, tenants are distracted by travel or family plans, and contractors can’t provide quotes for damage disputes until mid-January.
Request early-December or mid-January inspections instead. And whatever the timing, take your own dated photos of every room - your best defence in deposit disputes.
The hidden costs nobody mentions
Removal companies charge premium rates during Christmas week. Utility companies process final readings slower. Council tax refunds take longer. Your broadband cancellation? That's a 30-day notice period that doesn't care about your moving date.
But here's what costs tenants most: emergency expenses when things go wrong during the period when nothing's open. Heating failure during Christmas week in an empty property you're still responsible for? Lost keys when locksmiths charge triple rate? These aren't hypothetical scenarios, they're predictable Christmas moving problems.
The overlap strategy that works
The cheapest Christmas move isn’t the one with the tightest timing - it’s the one with deliberate overlap. Paying double rent for 3–5 days is usually far cheaper than the chaos of trying to move on December 28th when no one is available to help, nothing is open, and problems cannot be resolved.
An overlap also protects your deposit: time for proper cleaning, repairs, and addressing issues professionally instead of rushing through a holiday-week checkout.
What your landlord must still provide
Christmas doesn’t suspend landlord obligations. Emergency repairs still require 24-hour response. If your boiler breaks on December 27th, “we’ll fix it when we’re back” is not legally acceptable. Document everything.
Deposit protection timelines also continue unchanged. Your deposit must be protected within 30 days of payment - Christmas included.
Your Christmas moving checklist
- Add 10–14 days to notice periods to account for closures
- Book removal services before December (prices spike after mid-month)
- Schedule inspections early December or after January 6th
- Plan 3–5 days of rental overlap
- Photograph both properties with date-stamped images
- Submit meter readings before December 23rd
- Keep landlord emergency contacts accessible
- Don’t assume services resume Jan 2nd - many restart Jan 6th
The tenants who handle Christmas moves well aren't the ones who find bargains. They're the ones who understand that festive period "convenience" usually means compressed timeframes when you're least able to protect your interests. Plan for that reality, not the fantasy of empty diaries and helpful family members.
Our team understands the complications of festive moves. Get professional guidance today