That's what we often discuss, and the answer seems to be 'No', at least when there is already a tenant.OK, Devils Advocate, ... If you are enting a property and you get an unsat EICR you now have 28 days to rectify. ... If you then get, for instance, another 28 firms to do an EICR and 1 or more gives you a sat EICR then could you use that one to demonstrate compliance and merely ignore the others?
The legislation appears to require that that a copy of the first ('unsatisfactory') EICR be provided to the tenant and for any C1/C2 to be remedied within 28 days- seemingly with no provision for 'appealing against' that EICR and/or getting another EICR in the hope that it might 'over-ride' the initial one.
However, as I wrote very recently, if there is currently no tenant (but maybe an intention to let the property out subsequently), the 'landlord legislation' would not apply - so the owner of the property is presumably free to ignore/'tear up' as many EICRs as they wish before getting one which is 'satisfactory'!
I would suggest (not for the first time!) that there is limited common sense in this legislation.
Kind Regards, John