I have just received back a property that had the same tenant in it for the last 14 years. It's a property I built myself and took great pride in building - I built everything myself including the stairs which had several turns in them and was one of my first forays into proper woodworking. Anyway this tenant was a single mother who brought up her kids - 2 boys in the house, they have not cared for the house at all and they also overfilled it with 'stuff' and also counter to the contract sublet rooms to people I never knew. As the boys grew they got involved with drugs and windows got broken as dealers came around for their money and neighbours were disturbed with fighting and drink and drug related behaviour outside the house etc. She was aways late on paying the rent and it usually came in part payments if it came at all, at one point her rent arrears reached around £6000.
I had always been sympathetic to her position, charged her less rent than my other similar properties and gave her many opportunities to catch up on the rental arrears over the years but the only thing that ever really focused her on doing this was when after years of arrears culminating in the £6k I mentioned earlier, I finally server her with a Section 8 Eviction Notice. Section 8 differs from Section 21 in that Section 8 requires a specific 'at fault' situation to be described in order to successfully legally complete the eviction, whereas a Section 21 eviction does not require the landlord to specify any fault (although that doesn't mean there isn't one). In nearly 25 years of letting, this is the only time I have ever served an eviction notice on a tenant, and as it happened I never followed through with it as it focused her sufficiently to agree with me a payment plan to catch up over the next few years which she broadly managed to do.
She was a similar age to me - mid 50's and last month she sadly all of a sudden passed away in the house with a blood clot (no mentions of the vax here please..) and after negotiations with the remaining family, her son and lodger found alternative accommodation and I finally received the property back last week after 14 years. Its in a terrible state and I am out of pocket as she had used her deposit up as rent and there was some small rent arrears although nothing like the £6k from a few years ago. The house will need a complete renovation, new kitchen and bathroom etc - they also flooded the upstairs bathroom on a number of occasions and this has cause significant damage to the floor. Mould is also an issue through lack of ventilation and too much stuff in the house stacked up against the walls internally etc. A lot of rubbish was left behind and I spent last week gathering that up and loading up my truck and visiting the tip 6 times. I have finally got the house empty and can start ripping out the bathroom and kitchen etc. in order to get it back into a nice condition for the next tenants.
One point worth noting on Eviction process's is that regarding the Section 8 Eviction Notice that I mentioned earlier, this requires the tenant to be at actual fault, such as evidence of anti social behaviour which has to be documented over time or rent arrears etc, If using rent arrears under Section 8 to evict tenants, then the arrears have to be in excess of 2 months worth of rent before the Section 8 eviction process can be started. If at any point a tenant manages to get back within 2 months of rent arrears during this process then the Eviction Notice is nullified and a new one would have to be started if they again fall more than 2 months behind in arrears.
What often happens in this scenario is that the council's do not want the tenants to be evicted as it then become the councils liability to house them, so they advise the tenants not to move out and they often will give them enough money to pay the landlord sufficiently to get them within the 2 month arrears cut off point, this then halts the eviction process and saves the tenants becoming the councils liability.
It is for this reason that landlords usually use a Section 21 Eviction notice where they don't need to specify a fault in order to get rid of problematic tenants, rather than play games with the council over rent payments or have to document antisocial behaviour and risk the country deeming it insufficient etc
'No fault' Section 21 Evictions are rarely used to evict tenants who are not at any fault - except for the instance when a landlord may need his property back to sell or live in himself. Section 21 'no fault' evictions are invariably used to evict bad tenants who are in arrears or who act in an anti social manner etc. The problem is because a 'fault' does not have to be specified this has allowed anti landlord pressure groups like Shelter (who unlike landlords actually shelter no one) to mount a successful campaign against landlords using disingenuous propaganda.
Apologies if you have managed to get this far - I'll stop now