Awaab’s Law: What It Means for Housing Providers
Clearer timeframes. Wider hazards. More pressure on planned works.
Housing Associations already know why Awaab’s Law matters.
The next question is more practical: what does it mean for the products and assets that residents deal with every day?
Windows and doors sit right in the middle of this. A failed window can lead to excess cold, water ingress, damp, mould, poor security and fall risk. A damaged external door can affect safety, warmth and resident confidence. In blocks, AOVs and common-area glazing can also sit close to fire safety and smoke ventilation duties.
As Awaab’s Law expands through 2026 and into 2027, Housing Associations will need planned maintenance programmes that join up repairs, resident reports, stock data and compliant replacement work.

What changes from 2026 to 2027?
Awaab’s Law guidance for social landlords confirms that the first phase came into force on 27 October 2025. That phase covers all emergency hazards and damp and mould hazards that present a significant risk of harm.
The same guidance says the scope will extend in 2026 to include hazards where they present a significant risk of harm, including:
In 2027, the guidance says Awaab’s Law will extend to all remaining HHSRS hazards, apart from overcrowding, where they present a significant risk of harm.
For window and door programmes, the 2026 phase is the key turning point. Excess cold, falls, and fire risk can all link directly to the condition, specification or operation of windows, doors and AOVs.

Why windows and doors matter more in the later phases
Awaab’s Law is not just about damp and mould.
The GOV.UK guidance gives practical examples of deficiencies that can create hazards. It refers to disrepair, such as a broken window or door, that could lead to excessive cold. It also refers to poor ventilation or poor insulation as possible root causes of damp and mould hazards.
That makes the link clear.
A resident report about a draughty window, failed lock, rotten frame, leaking threshold, missing restrictor or damaged external door may no longer sit comfortably as a low-priority repair if it creates a significant risk of harm.
Housing Associations will need to decide quickly whether the issue is routine, significant or an emergency. That decision needs good information.
Resident reports need the right questions
The timeframes start when the landlord becomes aware of a potential hazard. Awareness can come from a resident, contractor, inspection, regulator or another third party.
That means call handlers, housing officers, repairs teams and contractors all have a part to play.
A basic window or door repair report may need more detail than before:
This is not about making the process heavier. It is about getting the right job to the right team the first time.

The timeframes are tight
Under the current Awaab’s Law repair timeframes, landlords must investigate potential emergency hazards and, where confirmed, complete relevant safety work within 24 hours of becoming aware of the hazard.
For potential significant hazards, landlords must investigate within 10 working days, provide a written summary within 3 working days of the investigation ending, and complete relevant safety work within 5 working days if a significant hazard is found.
Where further work is needed to stop the hazard coming back, landlords must begin, or take steps to begin, that work within 5 working days. If that cannot happen, work must start as soon as possible and physically start within 12 weeks.
That has a real effect on product supply.
If a failed window or door is part of a significant hazard, long lead times, unclear specifications and missing survey data can slow the response. Housing Associations will need supply routes that support fast decisions, clear evidence and predictable delivery.
Do not separate repairs from planned replacements
Awaab’s Law is triggered by hazards, not planned maintenance cycles.
But planned maintenance can reduce future pressure on repair teams.
If stock data shows repeat damp reports, failed seals, poor ventilation, security complaints or cold homes, that data can help shape the next replacement phase. The same applies to blocks with ageing communal doors, poor smoke ventilation interfaces or AOVs that are difficult to maintain.
A good 2027 programme will pull together:
That gives asset teams a clearer view of where planned spend will have the biggest effect.

Ventilation still needs careful handling
Windows can help reduce heat loss. They can also change how a home breathes.
Where windows are replaced, Housing Associations will need to make sure the ventilation strategy still works. Poor ventilation can contribute to condensation and damp. Missing or incorrect background ventilation can also create resident complaints after work is complete.
This matters under Awaab’s Law because the guidance makes it clear that poor ventilation or poor insulation may need remedial action where they are the root cause of a damp and mould hazard.
The best time to check ventilation is at the survey stage, before manufacture. That means recording existing vents, extractor fans, room use, resident reports and any evidence of damp or mould.
Warm homes still need fresh air. Simple as that.
Fall risk needs to be part of the window specification
The 2026 expansion includes falls associated with level surfaces, stairs and between levels where they present a significant risk of harm.
For windows, this brings restrictors, opening sizes, sill heights and resident vulnerability into sharper focus.
Housing Associations will need window specifications that deal with safety from the start, not as a late site fix. Survey teams also need to record where a window could present a fall risk, especially in homes with children or vulnerable residents.
A clear specification helps avoid repeat visits and gives residents confidence that the product is safe to use.

External doors affect safety, warmth and security
External doors can affect several risk areas at once.
A damaged or poorly fitting door may create draughts and excess cold. A failed lock can affect security. A door that does not close properly can create water ingress, heat loss or access issues. In some blocks, entrance doors and communal doors can also sit close to fire safety planning.
For 2027 onwards, Housing Associations will need door replacement programmes that consider:
A door that performs properly reduces repair demand. It also helps residents feel safe at home.

AOVs and common areas need early checks
They support smoke ventilation and link to the fire strategy. They may also link to controls, actuators, power supplies and maintenance access.
Where Awaab’s Law phases bring more fire-related hazards into scope, Housing Associations will need to make sure AOV replacement work is checked early. That means confirming the fire strategy, vent size, actuator requirements, control interface and evidence before the order is placed.
Listers supplies Eurocell AOV smoke vent windows for Housing Association and planned maintenance projects, with support for specification and project supply.
The 2026 HHSRS update also matters
The HHSRS guidance collection on GOV.UK was updated on 23 June 2026. GOV.UK says the updated system reduces the number of hazards from 29 to 21 and introduces updated assessment and scoring guidance.
For Housing Associations, this means survey forms, triage notes and planned works data may need to line up with the newer hazard language.
That is especially useful for windows and doors. It makes it easier to connect a reported defect to a clear risk area, then decide whether the response is repair, temporary safety work, planned replacement or a wider property check.
What Housing Associations will need from suppliers
Awaab’s Law puts more pressure on decision speed and evidence.
For window and door suppliers, that means the basics need to be right:
When supply is clear, planned works teams spend less time chasing details and more time getting homes safe, warm and secure.

How Listers can help
Listers supports Housing Associations, Local Authorities and Planned Maintenance Contractors with windows, doors and AOVs for social housing projects.
We help teams plan replacement programmes around product choice, specification, documentation, manufacturing capacity and delivery.
Windows. Doors. AOVs. One supplier. Clear support.
Find out more about Housing Association window, door and AOV replacement programmes with Listers.
Plan early. Respond faster.
Awaab’s Law is moving into a wider phase.
For Housing Associations, that means window and door condition can no longer be viewed only through age and repair cost. It needs to be linked to resident risk, warmth, ventilation, security, fall prevention and building safety.
The better the stock data, the clearer the specification. The clearer the specification, the easier the programme is to deliver.
Safe homes. Warm homes. Secure homes.
Built for trade. Simple as that.




