Legal
Terms of Service
The agreement between you and Rentwire when you use the service.
Last updated 2 June 2026
Template — pending legal review. This page is a good-faith starting point and not legal advice. Have a qualified solicitor review and tailor it to Rentwire’s actual data practices before launch.
Agreement
By creating an account or using Rentwire you agree to these terms. If you’re using Rentwire on behalf of an organisation, you confirm you have authority to bind that organisation.
The service
Rentwire provides software for managing property portfolios, including connecting an AI assistant via the Model Context Protocol. Rentwire reads your data to help you, but any action that changes a record requires your explicit approval. Rentwire operates on a read-only Open Banking basis and cannot initiate or move funds.
Your responsibilities
You’re responsible for the accuracy of the data you add, for keeping your account secure, for the actions you approve, and for using Rentwire lawfully — including your own obligations as a landlord or agent. Rentwire is a tool, not a substitute for professional legal, tax or compliance advice.
Subscriptions & billing
Paid plans are billed monthly or annually in advance. Founding prices are locked for life while your subscription stays active. You can cancel anytime; cancellation stops future renewals. Every plan is covered by a 30-day money-back guarantee — email us within 30 days of your first payment for a full refund.
Your data
Your data stays yours. You can export it at any time and delete your account in one click. Our handling of personal data is described in our Privacy Policy.
Liability
Rentwire is provided on a commercially reasonable basis. To the extent permitted by law, our total liability is limited to the fees you paid in the 12 months before the claim. Nothing in these terms limits liability that cannot be limited under law.
Changes & contact
We may update these terms; material changes will be notified in advance. Questions? Email hello@rentwire.co.uk. These terms are governed by the laws of England and Wales.