For Landlords & Letting Agents

Holding deposits explained: how to secure a booking before the lease is signed

A holding deposit — sometimes called a holding fee — is a small, usually refundable payment that takes a rental property off the market while references, right-to-rent checks and the tenancy agreement are finalised. Charge it correctly and you protect your income; charge it wrong and you risk a dispute (or in some markets, a fine). Here's how to do it properly.

The wall

Why "I'll hold it for you" isn't enough

A verbal agreement to hold a property costs the landlord nothing to break — and costs the tenant nothing to walk away from. Without money changing hands, the strongest applicant can disappear the moment a better property comes up, and you're back to square one with a vacant unit and lost rent.

  • Good applicants get offers from multiple landlords at once — the one who locks them in fastest wins.
  • Without a holding deposit, there's no incentive for either side to follow through before contracts are signed.
  • Collecting it 'informally' (bank transfer to a personal account) creates exactly the kind of paper-trail gap that leads to disputes later.
  • In some jurisdictions (e.g. England, under the Tenant Fees Act 2019), holding deposits are legally capped and regulated — getting it wrong can mean repaying the tenant double.
The fix

A clear holding deposit, collected with a payment link

A holding deposit works best when it's small, clearly time-boxed, and easy to pay and refund. PayRequest lets you send a payment request for the exact holding fee, with terms attached, and track whether it converts into the security deposit, gets refunded, or — where legally permitted — gets retained if the tenant withdraws.

Set a clear amount and deadline

Define the holding fee (commonly capped at one week's rent in regulated markets) and the number of days the property stays off the market.

Collect it in minutes, not days

Send a payment link by email or SMS. The applicant pays by card or digital wallet — no bank details exchanged, no waiting for a transfer to clear.

Convert it automatically

When the lease is signed, the holding deposit converts toward the security deposit or first month's rent — track this in your PayRequest dashboard.

Refund with one click

If the application doesn't proceed (through no fault of the tenant), refund the holding deposit instantly from the same payment record.

Walkthrough

How to collect a holding deposit, step by step

01

Decide the amount and put the terms in writing

Most markets treat one week's rent as a reasonable, often legally capped, holding deposit. State clearly what happens if the tenant withdraws, fails referencing, or if you withdraw the offer.

Before viewing ends
02

Send a payment request immediately after verbal agreement

Don't wait for a follow-up email thread — send the link while the applicant is still motivated, ideally within the hour.

5 min
03

Take the property off the market

Once the holding deposit is paid, pause your listings and stop other viewings — this is the applicant's main protection too.

Same day
04

Complete referencing and right-to-rent checks

Use the holding period (commonly 15 days under the UK Tenant Fees Act) to complete checks before signing the tenancy agreement.

Within 15 days
05

Convert, refund, or (rarely) retain

On signing, apply the holding deposit toward the security deposit or first month's rent. If the application fails through no fault of the tenant, refund in full.

On signing
Comparison

Holding deposit vs the other up-front payments

TypeTypical amountWhen paidRefundable?PurposeCommon cap
Holding deposit / fee≈1 week's rentBefore referencing / signingYes, in most casesReserves the property1 week's rent (e.g. England, Tenant Fees Act 2019)
Security deposit≈4–5 weeks' rentBefore / at move-inYes, at end of tenancyCovers damage, unpaid rent5 weeks' rent (England, annual rent under £50k)
Application / admin fee€0–50Before referencingUsually noCovers referencing costsBanned in some markets (e.g. England)
First month's rent1 month's rentAt / before move-inNo — it's rentCovers the first rental periodN/A
Who relies on holding deposits

From single lets to letting agencies

Private landlords with one or two lets

Lock in a tenant the moment they say yes, without expensive referencing software.

Letting agents managing multiple viewings

Standardise the holding fee across every listing and track which applicants have paid.

Vacation-rental hosts going long-term

Converting a short-term let to a 6–12 month tenancy? A holding deposit confirms the switch before you cancel other bookings.

Room and HMO landlords

Reserve a single room in a shared house while the rest of the tenancy agreement is finalised.

Under the hood

Why a payment link beats "bank details in a text message"

Sending your bank account number over WhatsApp works — until a tenant claims they never received a refund, or an applicant disputes how much they actually agreed to pay. A payment link creates a timestamped, itemised record on both sides automatically.

  • Every holding deposit gets a unique, timestamped payment record — useful if a dispute ever needs evidence.
  • Refunds are tracked against the original payment, so there's no 'did you actually send it back?' conversation.
  • Applicants see a branded checkout, not your personal bank details — which feels (and is) more professional and secure.
  • You can attach the holding deposit terms directly to the payment request, so the applicant agrees to them at the point of paying.
FAQ

Frequently asked questions

What is a holding deposit?+
A holding deposit (or holding fee) is a payment an applicant makes to a landlord or agent to reserve a rental property while the tenancy agreement, references and right-to-rent checks are completed. It's typically small — often around one week's rent — and is either refunded, offset against future rent, or converted into the security deposit once the tenancy starts.
Is a holding deposit refundable?+
In most cases, yes. If the tenancy goes ahead, the holding deposit is usually converted into the security deposit or offset against the first rent payment. If the application fails through no fault of the tenant — for example, the landlord withdraws or referencing takes too long for reasons outside the tenant's control — it should be refunded in full.
How much can a landlord charge for a holding deposit?+
This depends on local law. In England, the Tenant Fees Act 2019 caps holding deposits at one week's rent, and landlords who breach the rules can be required to repay it. Always check the rules that apply in your jurisdiction before setting the amount.
What happens if the tenant withdraws after paying a holding deposit?+
This depends on the written terms you provided when collecting the payment and on local regulations. In some jurisdictions, a landlord may retain part or all of the holding deposit if the tenant provides false information or withdraws without good reason — but this should always be set out clearly in writing before the deposit is taken.
Can a holding deposit be applied toward the security deposit?+
Yes — this is the most common outcome. Once the lease is signed, the holding deposit amount is typically credited toward the full security deposit (or first month's rent), so the tenant only needs to pay the difference.
How quickly should a holding deposit be refunded?+
Best practice — and in some jurisdictions a legal requirement — is within about 7 days of the decision not to proceed. Using a payment link makes this straightforward: refunds are issued against the original payment record with a few clicks.
Security Deposits for Landlords

Lock in your next tenant before they look elsewhere

Send a holding deposit payment request in under a minute — track, convert, or refund it from one dashboard.