Small vs Large Landlord: What the New 2026 Classification Means for You
For the first time in Irish law, landlords are divided into two categories with very different rights. Got 1 property? 10? Own personally or through a company? Your classification changes everything — and most landlords don’t know which category they fall into.
The New Classification System
From 1 March 2026, Irish landlords fall into one of two categories:
| Small Landlord | Large Landlord | |
|---|---|---|
| Definition | 1–3 tenancies AND not a registered company | 4+ tenancies OR any registered company |
| Eviction rights during TMD | Tenant breach, family use, financial hardship | Tenant breach only |
| Can sell during TMD? | Only for financial hardship | Tenant-in-situ only |
| End of TMD options | Sale, renovation, family use, change of use | Same as small at end of TMD |
Why This Matters
The distinction fundamentally changes how much control you have over your property. Small landlords retain more flexibility — they can end a tenancy for family use, financial hardship, or (at the end of a 6-year TMD) to sell, renovate, or change the property's use.
Large landlords face much tighter restrictions. During the 6-year TMD, the only grounds for termination are tenant breach or the property no longer being suitable. No-fault evictions are banned entirely.
The Company Trap
This is the detail that catches many landlords off guard: if you own your property through a registered company, you are automatically classified as a large landlord — even if you only have one tenancy.
Many landlords set up company structures for tax efficiency (the 12.5% corporation tax rate vs up to 52% personal rate). But under the 2026 rules, this tax advantage comes with a significant trade-off in flexibility.
How Tenancies Are Counted
The count is based on tenancies, not properties. A single building with four separate apartments counts as four tenancies. Each tenancy registered with the RTB counts towards your total. This means:
- A house with one tenant = 1 tenancy (small landlord)
- A duplex with 2 separate units = 2 tenancies (small landlord)
- A house converted into 4 flats = 4 tenancies (large landlord)
- 3 separate houses, each with one tenant = 3 tenancies (small landlord)
What Should You Do?
- Determine your classification — count your RTB-registered tenancies and check if any are company-owned
- If you're close to the boundary (3 tenancies) — think carefully before adding a 4th property, as it moves you into the large landlord category
- If you own through a company — weigh up the tax benefits of the company structure against the reduced flexibility under the new rules
- Run the Compliance Checker for a personalised assessment of your obligations