An HMO licence changes the question. In a single-let flat, your Legionella risk assessment lives in a drawer until something goes wrong. In a licensed house in multiple occupation, your water safety is part of a regulated arrangement the council can ask to see — so the assessment, and the evidence that you act on it, has to actually exist and be current.

That is the practical core of it. The legal duty to assess and control Legionella risk is the same one every landlord carries: you must assess the risk in the water systems you control and keep that assessment under review [1]. What an HMO adds is scrutiny plus a system that is genuinely harder to keep safe. More occupants, more outlets, often a larger stored volume of hot water, and rooms that empty and refill on their own schedule. The risk is higher and the paperwork is no longer private.

So the job has two halves: control the shared system properly, and be able to prove you did.

Why an HMO system is not just a bigger flat

A typical buy-to-let flat has a small, simple system where water turns over often, and for that reason most are low risk [1]. An HMO breaks several of those comforting assumptions at once.

Start with the hot water. Many HMOs run a stored system — a calorifier or a large cylinder feeding several bathrooms — rather than a single combi serving one kitchen and bathroom. Stored hot water sits at temperature for longer, and the bottom of a poorly circulated cylinder is exactly where Legionella likes to grow if it drops out of the safe range [4]. The more outlets you feed, the more pipework you have, and the longer some of those runs sit unused between uses.

Then there is occupancy. Tenants come and go room by room. A let room can stand empty for a fortnight while its en-suite shower and basin are not touched at all, creating a localised dead leg in an otherwise busy building. Stored and stagnant water in larger shared systems is precisely where risk concentrates [6]. The building looks occupied; that one bathroom has been still for two weeks.

In my view this is the single point most HMO landlords miss: the risk is not spread evenly across the property. It pools in the quiet corners — the spare shower, the seldom-used top-floor basin, the cylinder that never quite reaches temperature.

What the licence actually expects of you

A licence does not invent a new Legionella law. The duty comes from health and safety legislation and is set out for water systems in the ACoP L8 and HSG274 guidance [1][2]. What the licence does is make your compliance visible and conditioned: licensing authorities attach conditions about the property’s safety and management, and water safety sits naturally inside that. An inspector who asks for your gas and electrical records can reasonably ask what you have done about Legionella.

The pragmatic reading is this. Treat your Legionella risk assessment as a licence-grade document, not a formality. It should name the responsible person, describe the actual system in this building, identify the higher-risk features (the stored cylinder, the void-prone rooms, any redundant pipework), and set the control measures and the review interval [1]. A generic template that could describe any flat will not survive a serious question.

Applied across the situations you will actually face

Three scenarios cover most of what an HMO throws at you.

A room falls vacant. Before the next tenant moves in, that room’s outlets have been still — so flush the shower and basin through until the water turns over and runs hot, the same as you would after any void [4]. Build it into your turnover checklist alongside cleaning and key handover.

You inherit a building with a big old cylinder. Get the stored hot water temperature checked and the distribution right, because temperature control is the primary defence the guidance leans on for hot and cold systems [4]. If the cylinder cannot hold the expected temperature, that is a control failure to fix, not a quirk to live with — your risk assessment sets the figure your system should achieve [4].

A tenant is more vulnerable. HMOs sometimes house older or unwell residents, and susceptibility to Legionnaires’ disease rises with age and underlying conditions [11]. That does not change the engineering, but it sharpens why the quiet shower matters.

Practical checklist: the HMO Legionella evidence file

Use this to build the records a licence holder should be able to produce on request. Each item is something you can date, sign and store.

  • Record the responsible person. Name who manages water safety day to day, and confirm in writing whether the duty sits with you or a managing agent — appointing an agent does not move the legal accountability off the person in control [7].
  • Hold a current, site-specific risk assessment. It must describe this building’s actual system, flag the stored cylinder and any dead legs, and set a review date [1].
  • Log hot and cold temperatures at sentinel outlets and at the cylinder, at the frequency your assessment sets, against the figures the guidance expects [4].
  • Keep a flushing record for void and low-use outlets, including each room turnover [4].
  • Note any remedial actions — a recalibrated thermostat, a removed redundant pipe — with dates closed out.
  • Diarise the review for when occupancy or the system changes, or at the interval you set [3].

Keep it in one place and keep it legible. A box of loose certificates is not evidence of management; a dated, ordered log is.

A short honesty note

This is general guidance, not a verdict on your building. Every HMO has its own plant, layout and occupancy pattern, and only a competent, site-specific risk assessment can decide which controls and what monitoring frequency your property actually needs — including whether your particular system warrants sampling, which most simple domestic systems do not [1][5]. Use this to ask better questions, not to replace that assessment.

FAQ

Does an HMO legally need a Legionella certificate?

No. There is no “Legionella certificate” in UK law for residential property. What you need is a suitable and sufficient risk assessment that you keep under review, plus evidence you act on it [1]. The difference matters more in an HMO because a licensing authority may actually ask to see that evidence.

Who is the responsible person in a multi-let house?

The duty sits with whoever is in control of the premises. If you manage the HMO yourself, that is you; if you use a managing agent, agree in writing who does the assessment and monitoring — but the legal accountability does not transfer simply by appointing them [7].

How often should communal HMO hot water be checked?

Your risk assessment sets the interval. As a general expectation, sentinel and stored-water temperatures are monitored on a routine cycle, with more attention where water is stored or stands still [4]. Treat void rooms as needing a flush at every turnover regardless of the headline schedule.

Sources

[1] HSE, “Legionnaires’ disease. The control of legionella bacteria in water systems - ACoP and guidance (L8)”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/books/l8.htm [2] HSE, “Legionnaires’ disease: Technical guidance (HSG274)”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/pubns/books/hsg274.htm [3] HSE, “Legionnaires’ disease - what you must do”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/what-you-must-do/index.htm [4] HSE, “Hot and cold water systems”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/hot-and-cold.htm [5] HSE, “Testing and monitoring your water system for legionella”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/testing-monitoring-water-system.htm [6] HSE, “Systems most likely to create legionella risk”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/risk-systems.htm [7] HSE, “Legionella and landlords’ responsibilities”. https://www.hse.gov.uk/legionnaires/legionella-landlords-responsibilities.htm [11] NHS, “Legionnaires’ disease”. https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/legionnaires-disease/