Mar
2

Rental deposit costs dwarfed by increase in TV, mobile contracts and Big Macs

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The latest research by lettings deposit
replacement scheme, Ome, has revealed how much we are paying to secure a rental
property and how this has changed in the last five years, as well as how this
price increase compares to other items throughout our daily lives.  

Ome’s data shows that the current tenant is now
paying £1,139, a 5% increase compared to the £1,088 paid in 2014. Renting is
thought to be one of life’s largest financial hurdles, with the traditional
upfront deposit charged at the start of a tenancy, in particular, posing an
obstacle to the nation’s tenants.  

However, when looking at the cost of a deposit
compared to the inflation of other everyday costs, the figures show that
deposits have increased at a lower rate than many other costs of living,
suggesting the issues of cash flow surrounding renting stretch further than the
deposit itself.

The cost of a basic pay TV package, such as Sky
or Virgin, has increased from an average of £22 to £28 in the last five years,
the largest increase at 26%.

While the cost of renting has increased, it’s
the cost of buying a home that has seen the second largest increase in the last
five years, up 24% to the current average house price of £231,265.  

The sum we spend on our mobile phones has seen
the third largest increase, up 22%, while the price of a Big Mac has also
increased more than the average rental deposit (+19%).

Other items that have increased at a greater
rate than tenancy deposits in the last five years are car insurance (15.3%),
the price of gold (10%), the cost of a pint (10%) and the cost of a cinema
ticket (6%).

In fact, the only things to make the list that
have increased at a lower rate than a rental deposit are home insurance costs
(4%) and petrol (-2%). During this time, the average UK salary has only
increased by 12.4%, meaning many day to day items have grown at a larger rate,
although again, rental deposit are not one of these.

Co-founder of Ome, Matthew Hooker,
commented: 

“The rental sector has received a fair share of
negative press in its time and much of this has been focussed around the
traditional deposit and the sums charged by agents at the start of a tenancy in
order for a tenant to secure a property.

However, with the recent Tenant Fee Act shining
a light on the fees charged by traditional letting agents, it’s interesting to
see that in relative terms, the increase in the value of tenant deposits is
actually smaller than the increase seen in our TV packages, mobile contracts,
Big Macs, and even the growth in the average UK salary.

So it would seem that it is the cost of living
within a property itself that is putting the greatest financial squeeze on the
nation’s tenants, with the actual deposit only proving a problem for those
unable to accumulate the large initial sum, or finding themselves short for
other areas of life once they have.

Of course, many of these other costs are either
small or provide the option to pay in installments with the deposit being the
last major cost that can’t be widely tackled in bite sized chunks. That’s why
we’ve seen a number of deposit alternatives enter the market in order to
provide this choice and allow tenants to stay on top of the climbing costs
elsewhere in life, by opting to pay their rental deposit on a more manageable
monthly basis.”

Variable Five year change (2014 – 2019)
Basic pay-TV price (monthly) 26%
Average house price 24%
Mobile usage price (monthly) 22%
Big Mac 19%
Car insurance premium (annual) 15%
UK Net Salary 12%
Gold 10%
Pint of beer 10%
Cinema ticket 6%
Tenancy deposit 5%
Home insurance premium (annual) 4%
Unleaded petrol (pump price) -2%
Sources
Rental Deposits Ome source1 – Ome unique data
TDS source2 – TDS
statistics
Car insurance Money supermarket source3 – car
insurance
Home insurance Money supermarket source4 – home
insurance
Mobile phone & TV costs Ofcom source5 –
communications pricing statistics
Average house price Gov/Land Reg source6 – Ave House
Price
Gold historical prices Bullion by post source7 – gold
historical prices
Cinema ticket statistics Statista source8 – cinema
ticket prices
Petrol prices RAC source9 – petrol
historical prices
Price of a pint of beer ONS source10 – ONS
inflation statistics
Big Mac price statistics FM source11 – Big Mac
historical prices
BL source12 – Big Mac
current prices
Average salary data ONS source13- Average
salary data

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Rental deposit costs dwarfed by increase in TV, mobile contracts and Big Macs | LandlordZONE.

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Mar
2

Are tenants really being squeezed by higher rents?

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Research published today claims wages are rising faster than rents and that average rental deposits has only increased by 5%.

The cost of renting has increased at a slower rate than the average salary, research published today has revealed.

Although many housing campaigners often claim that tenants are being hammered by ‘avaricious’ landlords, the cost of renting and paying for a deposit has risen slower than the average wage, which has increased by 12.4% over the past five years.

Over the same period, rental deposits have increased by five percent to £1,139 up from £1,088 in 2015.

This mirrors the government’s official rental price index, which shows that rents have increased by 4.38% over the past five years.
Completed by alternative rental deposits provider Ome, this research also reveals that prices are mounting for tenants on several other fronts.

This include the cost of paying for TV subscription services such as Sky and Virgin, which have jumped by 26% to £28 a month over the same period.

“The rental sector has received a fair share of negative press in its time and much of this has been focussed around the traditional deposit and the sums charged by agents at the start of a tenancy in order for a tenant to secure a property,” says Ome co-founder Matthew Hooker.

“But it would seem that it is the cost of living within a property itself that is putting the greatest financial squeeze on the nation’s tenants, with the deposit only proving a problem for those unable to accumulate the large initial sum, or finding themselves short for other areas of life once they have.”

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Are tenants really being squeezed by higher rents? | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Are tenants really being squeezed by higher rents?

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