Some good news for you this weekend
We are delighted to be able to share a valuable gift with you this weekend.
Last week Simon Zutshi, Author of Property Magic, and founder of the property investors network launched his brand new six-module online Home Study programme
View Full Article: Some good news for you this weekend
Updated ‘How to Rent Guide’ published tomorrow
An updated How to Rent Guide will be published tomorrow (Friday), and this version is the one that must be issued by landlords and letting agents to new tenants and those renewing contracts.
The guide is the checklist for renting in England and should landlords and agents not issue the correct and current version
View Full Article: Updated ‘How to Rent Guide’ published tomorrow
Help with tenant rent arrears on Universal Credit?
Hello, I have a tenant with six months rent arrears on Universal Credit. I have filled in an online form for direct payment from UC but this was rejected.
These were the possible reasons they gave for the rejection but they did not tell me specifically:
1) tenant not on UC or housing benefit
2) wrong address
3) not in arrears
All of the above are not true so I made a call to UC but they said they need the permission from the tenant to look into the account.
View Full Article: Help with tenant rent arrears on Universal Credit?
‘Disappointing’ – housing chiefs slam lack of property measures in Budget
Landlords, estate agents and surveyors have all given yesterday’s Budget an unqualified thumbs down after the Chancellor chose to focus on economic growth but ignore several problem threatening to engulf the housing market.
All have said the budget was disappointing and a ‘missed opportunity’ to invest in the UK’s housing market and head off some looming problems.
These include an affordability crisis looming for first time buyers, a mortgage affordability crunch for those coming off low fixed rate loans, and a supply shortage in the private rented sector.
Chris Norris, Policy Director for the National Residential Landlords Association
“The Chancellor spoke of growth yet did nothing to introduce the pro-growth measures that are necessary if the private rented sector’s supply crisis is to be addressed.
“The current system, under which landlords are penalised for providing new homes to rent, only makes it tougher for many renters to access good quality rental properties.
“Without a comprehensive review of how the sector is taxed, supply and demand issues will only become more acute as time goes on.
“Today’s Budget also does nothing for those who are in receipt of housing benefit payments, who will continue to face an unjust freeze on the support they need.”
Nathan Emerson, CEO of Estate Agent Body Propertymark
“The Chancellor has outlined a positive economic outlook in relation to growth, inflation and debt that will provide confidence to those looking to buy and sell their homes.
“Additional funding for Levelling Up regeneration projects will also help to develop communities and places where people want to live.
“However, despite the continued focus on VAT relief for energy saving materials it is disappointing that funding for energy efficiency improvements be-it for homeowners or landlords is not on the UK Government’s agenda and the Budget is a missed opportunity to support people to de-carbonise the housing sector.
“Additionally, there was no mention of tax incentives to boost much needed supply in the private rented sector.
“Whilst we recognise the UK Government’s focus on getting more people into work, there is little appetite to improve the welfare system and support those who are struggling the most which will have a continued knock-on impact particularly for those low-income households who rent.”
A RICS spokesperson
“RICS is disappointed by the lack of housing ambition in this budget. The fallout from the ‘mini-budget’ hit the housing market hard, and we still have the challenges of limited housing stock and rising rents as reported again in last week’s RICS UK Residential Market Survey.
“Investment and support in creating housing stock both in the right place and of the right tenure, to support both buyers and renters is critical now more than ever.
“This could be through new builds and suitable, standards-driven conversions, given the removal of housebuilding targets. With political will, there is a way.”
View Full Article: ‘Disappointing’ – housing chiefs slam lack of property measures in Budget
Homeowners are better off than renters every year
Homeowners are nearly £500 better off a year than a renter, research from Halifax reveals
It says that the monthly cost of owning a home for first-time buyers is now £971, on average.
That is £42 or 4% cheaper than the cost of renting an equivalent property.
View Full Article: Homeowners are better off than renters every year
Service charge dispute win ends up costing £18k?
Hi everyone, We took our Freehold Landlord to the small claims court for £3k and then it was transferred to the first-tier tribunal
The Freeholder lost and was made to refund us £2520 in service charge overpayments we had made.
View Full Article: Service charge dispute win ends up costing £18k?
BUDGET DAY: Underwhelmed PRS speaks out over a missed opportunity
It was a Budget to forget after the Chancellor Jeremy Hunt appeared to have forgotten landlords, tenants and the private rented sector (PRS) in general.
Despite hopes that there would be an announcement how the PRS is taxed –
View Full Article: BUDGET DAY: Underwhelmed PRS speaks out over a missed opportunity
BUDGET 2023: Hunt ignores pressing needs of landlords and tenants
The government failed to offer long-term support for energy efficiency improvements or increase the Local Housing Allowance in a Budget which instead focused on getting the country back to work.
Chancellor Jeremy Hunt extended support for energy bills at current levels of £2,500 for a further three months and brought the charges of the four million people on pre-payment meters in line with comparable direct debit charges.
However, he made no mention of the hoped-for incentives for landlords and homeowners to make properties greener in the run-up to changing EPC rules.
Housing groups will also be disappointed that he made no announcement about helping renters meet a shortfall in their payments through unfreezing LHA.
As part of its reform of the welfare system, the Chancellor pledged to fund a new Universal Support Programme to help disabled people get into work.
Hunt also promised that for those on Universal Credit – two million job seekers – sanctions would be applied more rigorously to those who refuse to look for work. The earnings threshold would increase from 15 hours per week to 18 hours.
Universal credit
Parents on Universal Credit will now receive up to £951 for one child and £1,630 for two children per month which would be paid upfront.
The government’s childcare reform plans should help those tenants with children under five who will get 30 hours of free childcare a week from the end of maternity leave.
As previously announced, corporation tax will rise from 19% to 25% on 1st April, affecting portfolio landlords and those with limited companies.
However, no tax burden relief was offered to the sector, but neither was the rumoured increase in Stamp Duty.
For those landlords looking to the future, Hunt announced an increase in the pensions annual tax-free allowance from £40,000 to £60,000 while he also abolished the Lifetime Allowance – previously set at £1.07m.
Read the HMRC full briefing notes in full.
View Full Article: BUDGET 2023: Hunt ignores pressing needs of landlords and tenants
Budget 2023 – Despite intensive lobbying, landlords miss out
The Chancellor of the Exchequer, Jeremy Hunt, let landlords sink or swim on their own with no direct assistance for landlords in his Budget announced today. Unlike £63 million of funds for swimming pools, but excluding the PM’s that required an upgrade for the local grid.
View Full Article: Budget 2023 – Despite intensive lobbying, landlords miss out
Awaab’s Law ‘must be extended to private rented sector’, says Generation Rent
Generation Rent is calling on the government to extend Awaab’s Law to the PRS after its survey found 1,106 private rented homes in England with dangerous levels of damp and mould.
A Freedom of Information request by the campaign group found that the 65 councils which reported a breakdown of complaints had received 60,849 about standards in private rented housing in 2021-22, including 8,048 complaints about damp and mould (13%).
The 69 councils which reported a breakdown of hazards found 7,695 Category 1 hazards, including 1,106 cases of damp and mould (14%). However, this is a very small proportion of the 4.6 million homes in the PRS.
As Parliament debates Awaab’s Law, which would set strict timescales for social landlords to respond to complaints about damp and mould – part of the Social Housing (Regulation) Bill – Generation Rent believes its research also provides new evidence of the need for an end to Section 21 evictions, which can discourage tenants from complaining.
When councils found unsafe conditions in private rented homes, they took action to protect the tenant from retaliatory eviction in only 24% of cases.
improvement notices
It reports that while 81 councils identified a total of 9,033 Category 1 hazards, they issued just 2,179 improvement notices, meaning that private tenants had a 24% chance of getting formal protection if their home was found to be unsafe.
Generation Rent Director Alicia Kennedy says: “Landlords, whether they are huge housing associations or an individual letting out their former home, have one job: to provide their tenants with a safe home.
“Too many try to dodge their responsibilities by blaming tenants or serving a no-fault eviction notice.”
In January, the government announced plans to tackle mould within the private and social housing sectors through updated guidance and initiatives and confirmed that the PRS’s new housing ombudsman would lead the battle against mould.
View Full Article: Awaab’s Law ‘must be extended to private rented sector’, says Generation Rent
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