Save The Date – 29th April 2020 @ 7pm
Join me, Shaf Rasul from Dragons Den, Simon Zutshi and Ranjan Bhattacharya live for an online Baker Street Property Meet at 7pm on 29th April 2020.
I cannot even begin to tell you how excited I am to be o the same panel as a real life Dragon!
The post Save The Date – 29th April 2020 @ 7pm appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: Save The Date – 29th April 2020 @ 7pm
Airbnb landlords step up to the mark as councils plead for homeless accommodation
Landlords with short-term let accommodation face a difficult choice as booking dry up and the sales and long-term lettings market stay frozen. So why not help out local councils?
Airbnb
landlords in Edinburgh who have seen business slump are doing their bit by
offering vacant properties to homeless families affected by the crisis.
It
follows an urgent call by councils around the country to second homeowners,
hoteliers, B&Bs, Airbnb owners and student housing providers to come
forward with offers of help so homeless people and rough sleepers can
self-isolate.
Thanks to them, 65 flats – as well as 120 hotel rooms in Edinburgh – have been taken over to house homeless families with children who were stuck in unsuitable bed and breakfasts.
Council leader Adam McVey says: “We’ve worked
hard to find safe places to stay for everyone who is or becomes homeless during
this pandemic.
“We’ve successfully moved the families we
care for into suitable flats – including properties sourced from the private
sector. We’re also determined that this will remain the case for as long as the
coronavirus crisis continues.”
The council tells LandlordZONE that it currently has enough homes to meet demand, but that its Additional Accommodation Needs Team is still focused on finding options.
“It’s a mixture of us sourcing the right
places for people to stay and offers coming in which we sift through,” says a spokeswoman.
“We negotiate on a case-by-case basis with each landlord
on this, but we will pay.”
Meanwhile, Airbnb hosts are offering NHS and
other frontline medical staff free places to stay while they carry out their
critical work, with Airbnb waiving all fees for the stays. So far nearly
1,500 places have been offered by UK hosts.
If any Edinburgh landlords are interested in
helping, contact Jillian.cunningham-edwards@edinburgh.gov.uk
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Airbnb landlords step up to the mark as councils plead for homeless accommodation | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: Airbnb landlords step up to the mark as councils plead for homeless accommodation
Happy New Tax Year!
For those property rental business owners we have helped to restructure over recent months and years, they will know exactly what we mean when we say “Happy New Tax Year!”
For others, those who have buried their heads in the sand or failed to seek advice and/or take action
The post Happy New Tax Year! appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: Happy New Tax Year!
Liverpool fights ministers over Selective Licensing ban with Judicial Review
After having an application to renew its city-wide scheme refused by Housing secretary Robert Jenrick last month, Liverpool councillors say they have a ‘moral obligation’ to regain its powers.
Liverpool Council is to fight a Government
decision to block the renewal of its controversial selective licensing scheme.
It has applied for a judicial review after
Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick turned down its application earlier
this year to keep the city-wide scheme going until 2025.
Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson says the council
has a moral obligation to tens of thousands of residents living within the
city’s private rented sector to ensure the scheme continues.
“Over the last five years our officers have
come across people whose landlords are happy to take their rent while allowing
them to live in appalling conditions with unsafe electrics, gas supply and no
fire doors to protect them in the event that a blaze breaks out,” says
Anderson.
The previous five-year scheme ended on 1st
April, during which time there were 51,764 property licences in force, issued
to 10,074 licence holders.
The council’s team conducted over 34,000
compliance checks of properties and identified 65% as not being fully compliant
with licence conditions on their first visit.
It made more than 300 successful prosecutions
that led to fines and says all current cases with the legal team will continue
to be processed and taken to court where necessary.
However,
the Residential Landlords Association opposes the city-wide licensing scheme
and says Liverpool’s running of the current scheme left much to be desired,
with long waits for licences and a focus on minor, often administrative
breaches, rather than tackling the worst property management and conditions.
Alongside
the review, Liverpool Council is also looking at submitting another application to the Government for a
substantial landlord licensing scheme.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Liverpool fights ministers over Selective Licensing ban with Judicial Review | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: Liverpool fights ministers over Selective Licensing ban with Judicial Review
Covid-19: Everything landlords need to know
In times of uncertainty, one of the best ways, as a landlord or agent, that you can protect yourselves and your tenants is to make sure that you have all the information you need. This post by Hamilton Fraser wraps up everything that landlords and agents need to know about coronavirus.
The post Covid-19: Everything landlords need to know appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: Covid-19: Everything landlords need to know
Today in politics: New Labour leader, Flood Re, new documents and benefits
We look at the new Labour leader’s former comments on housing, plans for a review of flooding insurance, the news benefits claimants that are currently repaying overpayments will have a three month break due to coronavirus and more. Starmer has backed rent control calls Sir Keir Starmer MP was elected the new Leader of the Labour […]
The post Today in politics: New Labour leader, Flood Re, new documents and benefits appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.
View Full Article: Today in politics: New Labour leader, Flood Re, new documents and benefits
Double whammy threatens landlords with cash-flow issues…
Rent payments:
The Coronavirus Act
introduced a ban on private tenant evictions, and this, coupled with
the general media message abroad that tenants should have a rent
reduction, a rent holiday or even pay no rent, creates major issues
for some buy-to-let landlords.
The eviction ban is
in for at least the next three months, which means the suspension of
all eviction proceedings going through the courts for 90 days. It
exposes landlords to a risk not encountered before, of an extended
and lengthy period of rental losses.
It’s very
unfortunate for those landlords who were in the process of evicting
tenants when the crisis came along, possibly with large existing rent
arrears losses when trials were halted and the county courts closed
down.
So, landlords now
needing to evict a tenant for any reason, including rent
arrears, is required to
give a minimum of three months’
notice, until at least the 30th of September. The
extension of the legal notice might add only one month to the usual
S21 two-month notice period, but this is just the start of the
process. Obtaining a court possession order to evict those tenants
who are unwilling to move will inevitably eventually face long delays
due to the backlog of suspended cases, and possibly a more lenient
approach taken by the courts.
The message seems to
have been lost in translation over rent payments, or is it just
wishful thinking on behalf of some tenants or their campaigning
groups? Government has not asked landlords to stop requesting rent
payments, and tenants need to be reminded they should continue to pay
rent and that they will still be liable for any arrears that
build-up.
Landlords are
advised to get in touch with all their tenants to determine their
financial situation and deal with their situation on a case by case
basis, bearing in mind the social distancing measures in place. Some
landlords are voluntarily offering a 20% reduction where tenants are
on an 80% wage reduction furlough, a rescheduling of payments where
there are real difficulties, such as job losses or suspensions, or a
combination of the two. Tenants should be able to apply for financial
assistance when they are in real difficulties.
Landlords themselves
should be able to apply for financial support through the benefits
system if they too find themselves in personal financial
difficulties, and bearing in mind those landlords with mortgages on
their rental properties are able to request a three-month payment
holiday from their lender.
Landlords with tax
due on account, the second HRMC payment due on 31st of
July, can defer these self-assessment payments until the 31st
January 2021 under the special measures introduced by the government.
However, it is very
unlikely that landlords will be offered any further direct help from
the government, similar to that being offered to the self-employed.
This is because letting property on a personal basis (outside a
limited company) is classed as investment, not a business. The
trade-off is that earnings from lettings are not subject to Class 2
or Class 4 National Insurance contributions.
In the case of
commercial landlords, again they are not expected to bring eviction
proceeding against their business tenants for at least 3 months, for
rent arrears. These landlords have an additional business judgement
to consider: if they press their tenants too hard and drive them into
administration for incorporated tenants, or bankruptcy for personal
tenants, then they risk having to take on, for an indefinite period,
business rates, insurance and other liabilities which go with a
vacant unit.
The National Landlords’ Association (NLA) and the Residential Landlords’ Association (RLA), now combined as the NRLA, say they recognise the need for tenants to be able to remain in their homes given that they might be adversely affected by coronavirus and by the government lock-down restrictions. However, they are not happy with a blanket suspension of all evictions which they think is “too wide reaching” and that the government should do more to protect tenants’ incomes.
In addition the NRLA has called for a temporary scrapping of the five-week wait for the first payment of Universal Credit, to help tenants over this payment gap.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Double whammy threatens landlords with cash-flow issues… | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: Double whammy threatens landlords with cash-flow issues…
Facebook forum ejects ‘fake landlords’ posting contentious comments
Administrator warns that people posing as landlords will not be admitted amid worries that activists are deliberately attempting to portray landlords as uncaring and callous within discussion forums.
A landlord forum on Facebook has been forced to issue a warning to its 6,000 followers after ‘hundreds’ of new tenants suddenly joined, many posing as fake landlords and posting rude or misleading messages.
The group’s administrators were particularly worried by one, registered as ‘Timbo Tort’, who posed as a landlord who was in dispute with their tenant, complaining that a rent reduction of 20% had been requested. The person claimed to have rifled through the tenant’s bins to ascertain the ‘truth of the claim’.
“Yesterday my tenant sent me a message to say that he had been furloughed and that he was only going to pay 80% of the rent – where do I get the other 20%?” they said.
These posts were then captured via screen shot by several people on Twitter, saying: “UK landlords continuing to be perfectly normal and compassionate human beings again, I see.”
The Timbo Tort profile on Facebook has since been deleted after several other users within the Facebook landlord group questioned the person’s claims and identity.
Facebook identity
Following the surge in ‘fake landlords’, the Facebook site’s administrator issued the following warning, worried that the new members were part of a concerted attempt to portray landlords in a bad light during the crisis.
“Please
note this is a landlords group. Only for landlords. If you are not a landlord
then please leave,” it says.
There are groups everywhere for tenants. I have seen rude posts aimed at landlords and have had hundreds of applications to join the group from those we know are not landlords but claim they are. They will not be admitted.
“We have nothing to hide but we have nothing to offer tenants. This group is for landlords to get advice, share news and support from other landlords and experts to ensure they act within the law.”
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Facebook forum ejects ‘fake landlords’ posting contentious comments | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: Facebook forum ejects ‘fake landlords’ posting contentious comments
Webinars for letting property during these strange times
In this strange new world we are living in during the coronavirus lockdown, new rules apply – some of which affect rented property. What now are landlords rights and obligations?
The biggest blow to many landlords is the fact that they are unable to evict bad tenants.
The post Webinars for letting property during these strange times appeared first on Property118.
View Full Article: Webinars for letting property during these strange times
Coronavirus: Government issues guidance on EPCs
New guidance outlining the need for Energy Performance Certificates (EPCs) has been published by the government. The guidance specifies that the requirement for landlords to obtain an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) before they let the property out remains in place. Landlords should make sure this can be conducted in a safe manner, and should also […]
The post Coronavirus: Government issues guidance on EPCs appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.
View Full Article: Coronavirus: Government issues guidance on EPCs
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