Scheme aims to return £500,000 in unclaimed rental deposits

Tenancy deposit scheme SafeDeposits Scotland are on the hunt for Scottish tenants who have forgotten to claim back their deposits.

Related topics:  Finance
Rozi Jones
1st September 2016
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"We don’t think it’s right that people lose out on what’s due to them so we do everything we can to try and get people the money they are owed."

Tenancy deposit schemes were introduced in July 2012 and since then more than 156,000 deposits have been repaid by SafeDeposits Scotland. While millions of pounds have been returned to tenants at the end of their leases, a small proportion of people don’t claim back the money that is due to them.
 
A large proportion of missing tenants are students. With the start of the academic year, September is the busiest time for deposits being paid both in and out. The busiest day sees almost 90% more deposits being paid in than the average day through the year.

Just over 2,000 tenants have ended their leases without claiming back the money due them, totalling more than £500,000. If deposits aren’t claimed back within six years, unclaimed funds go to the Crown, a process which will start in 2018.
 
SafeDeposits Scotland’s finance team do everything they can to reunite former tenants with their money; sending letters to forwarding addresses, emailing, calling and texting. While successful in the majority of cases, some people are more elusive. Money cannot be paid directly back into accounts as this isn’t information that tenancy deposit schemes have been given.
 
The Scottish Government introduced the tenancy deposit scheme in 2012 to make deposits safe for tenants. When landlords and agents take a deposit from a tenant they’re required by law to lodge the money with one of three approved schemes who ring-fence the money until the end of the lease.
 
SafeDeposits Scotland is the largest of these three approved schemes and holds an estimated 60% of all private rental deposits. .
 
Jennifer Paice, Chief Executive of SafeDeposits Scotland, said: “It’s extremely surprising that people can leave their rented property and forget to ask for their deposit back. The vast majority of tenants remember to claim their money but there’s a small minority who don’t. Our finance team do a great job in tracking most of them down but there are a significant number they can’t get hold of. We don’t think it’s right that people lose out on what’s due to them so we do everything we can to try and get people the money they are owed.”

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