Belvoir CEO warns of continuing rental increases in 2022 and beyond
Belvoir’s rental statistics reveal the highest rental increases since records began in 2008. Belvoir CEO Dorian Gonsalves warns of further challenges to come, as years of flawed government policies continue to impact the market, resulting in stock shortages and high tenant demand.
View Full Article: Belvoir CEO warns of continuing rental increases in 2022 and beyond
89% of local authorities built zero council homes in 2021
Using the most recently published data by the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, Admiral Home Insurance analysed which parts of England have seen the most and the fewest new homes being built.
With a shortage of housing for many years in England
View Full Article: 89% of local authorities built zero council homes in 2021
TORY thinktank slams Gove’s plans to abolish Section 21
A leading ‘free-market’ economic commentator has questioned the government’s latest push to abolish Section 21 ‘no fault’ eviction notices.
Ryan Bourne, who is a regular TV pundit and Daily Telegraph columnist but also a member of the US-based thinktank the Cato Institute, doubts that abolishing Secton 21 would be a ‘win for tenants as campaign groups imply’.
“What we have here is an example of [tenants] wanting more of something – security – without being willing to pay for it,” he writes.
His comments follow Michael Gove’s decision to roll-up his department’s rental reforms, including abolishing Section 21, into the government’s ‘levelling up’ plans.
“In these scenarios, basic economics tells us that mandating benefits will lead to a waterbed effect of other margins adjusting, as landlords seek to protect themselves against the new higher risks of lock-in that such tenancies entail.”
Unintended consequences
Bourne, who is a long-standing opponent of rent controls, goes on to outline the unintended consequences of abolishing Section 21 including tougher referencing for tenants as landlords seek to weed out high-risk candidates, making it harder for those on benefits to access the PRS, higher rents as some landlords use rent hikes to force out tenants.
But, most worrying of all, he predicts fewer people will be willing to become private landlords and more will choose Airbnb not the traditional route.
He also slams the government’s plans to beef up Section 8 eviction notices to enable landlords to evict tenants under some circumstances such as needing to move back in or sell the property. Bourne claims, as many landlords commentators have, that this route will make it more difficult and expensive for landlords to evict tenants.
“Those harmed most by limited rental options will be the poorest, those without deposits for owner-occupied housing, and those for whom accessing new private rental accommodation is a route to a better job or life,” he adds.
“The beneficiaries will be those who want to stay in a property for years and years.
“This really highlights why fiddling with landlord-tenant relations is no alternative to major planning reform.”
Read the original blog on the ConservativeHome website.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – TORY thinktank slams Gove’s plans to abolish Section 21 | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: TORY thinktank slams Gove’s plans to abolish Section 21
GREEN taxes unfairly hitting poorer tenants hardest – warns landlord
Tenants in homes with electric heating are being unfairly penalised by the government’s green tax policy, says one concerned landlord.
Young, single tenants – often on low wages – are discriminated against because the green levy on their bills is higher on electricity than gas, according to Tricia Urquhart who has tenants in one and two-bed houses using electric heating.
They are generally paying far higher bills to heat their homes – often four to five times per kWh – and the recently announced 54% rise means their already expensive heating is even more costly in real terms.
The Nottingham landlord tells LandlordZONE: “I put in electric radiators when electricity was 10p a unit and the selling point was that they shouldn’t cost you more than gas – now it’s 21p.
One tenant couple never put their heating on because they don’t think they can afford it, while I’m surprised that another single tenant, who works from home and has the heating on, hasn’t given me notice.”
Little difference
Recently announced government help will mean 28 million households will receive about £350 to help offset soaring energy prices, but Urquhart says this will make little difference to these sole electricity users, whose bill is made up of 40% in green levies.
Currently, 23% of the cost of electricity is made up of environmental and social obligation costs, however, gas costs include less than 2%.
She adds: “Given that these users are using the green fuel it seems really unfair that the young, the single and the lower paid are paying such a large proportion of the green tax.
“I accept that the green levies may still need to be paid but they could be added to high use gas users and so penalise the polluters.”
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – GREEN taxes unfairly hitting poorer tenants hardest – warns landlord | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: GREEN taxes unfairly hitting poorer tenants hardest – warns landlord
EPC targets are a threat to the PRS
Specialist Buy to Let and commercial bank Shawbrook has released a report concerned about the threat to the rental market posed by a future C rating EPC target. Click here
The headlines of the report indicate that 23% of landlords surveyed say the EPC ratings of their properties are currently D or below and that a further quarter of landlords are unaware of the specific energy efficiency rating of their property.
View Full Article: EPC targets are a threat to the PRS
SHOCK RESEARCH: 27% of landlords have no idea their tenants have cats or dogs
Nearly one-third of pet-owning renters have been hiding their animals from landlords for more than three years, according to new research by build to rent giant Quintain Living.
Its survey of 1,000 renters also found that 38% don’t feel comfortable asking for permission to keep a pet and 29% had difficulty finding a property to rent as a pet owner. Almost one in five pet owners (17%) have considered giving up their furry or feathered friend in order to find somewhere to live.
Birds were named as the most secretly kept pets in the UK – a staggering 50% of respondents who keep birds admitted hiding them from their landlord – with rabbits in second place (43%) and rather bizarrely, horses, with 33% of respondents.
Walkies
Tenants find various ways of hiding their pets during landlord inspections, according to the buy-to-rent management firm: 35% take their pet for a walk, 32% ask a friend to pet-sit, 19% get neighbours to watch it, 15% hide it in a wardrobe or cupboard and 9% disguise it. As a result, 27% of landlords don’t know that their tenants keep pets.
Its research also found that Brighton is the most pet-friendly city in the UK – and Belfast is the least pet-friendly – with the most pet-friendly living in Norwich, Leeds and Sheffield. Plymouth, Cardiff and Edinburgh were at the other end of the scale.

Danielle Bayless (pictured), COO of Quintain Living, says: “For too long, renters have been excluded from keeping pets in their family homes, but, as we have proved, there is no reason why we cannot live in harmony together.
“We are proud to have been one of the first to offer pet-friendly homes to rent, as well as a host of pet-friendly amenities on site.”
Take our recent poll on attitudes to pets among landlords.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – SHOCK RESEARCH: 27% of landlords have no idea their tenants have cats or dogs | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: SHOCK RESEARCH: 27% of landlords have no idea their tenants have cats or dogs
Free Financial Management Software for Landlords from Lendlord
Lendlord is an online platform that helps landlords (with and without letting agents) to optimise their property investments with the following features:
Document Management
Securely store all your property details and documents in the cloud
View Full Article: Free Financial Management Software for Landlords from Lendlord
NEWSFLASH: Housing minister Christopher Pincher replaced during reshuffle
Christopher Pincher, one of the more longer-serving housing ministers in recent times, has been a victim of Boris Johnson’s brutal cabinet reshuffle today.
Until now the MP for Tamworth had been a housing ministry survivor, retaining his role as a minister in Johnson’s reshuffle in September 2021 when Gove replaced Jenrick.
Despite losing his red box privileges, Pincher’s stint at the Ministry of Housing and latterly the Department of Levelling Up make him the longest-serving holder of the role since Brandon Lewis left the post in July 2016.
But Pincher is not moving because he’s disloyal – rather the opposite; he is expected to get the job of Chief Whip from Mark Spencer, whose authority had been undermined in recent week as ‘loyalists’ like Pincher whipped fellow MPs into backing the beleaguered PM.

His replacement is Stuart Andrew (pictured) MP for Pudsey, Horsforth and Aireborough and, as is traditional now, has almost no experience of the housing sector.
Reactions from the industry to Pincher’s departure have been tepid, largely because progress on so many pieces of key industry legislation has failed to proceed recently including the long-promised renting reform proposals, and the regulation of estate agency regulations, both of which have been languishing in ministerial inboxes for several years now.
Sean Hooker, Head of Redress at the PRS, says he hopes that Pincher’s departure doesn’t delay progress on reform of the private rented sector and that Andrew can ‘get up to speed as quick as possible’.
Andrew’s previous Whitehall experience includes being a Deputy Chief Whip, a Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Defence and before that a similar role at the Wales Office.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – NEWSFLASH: Housing minister Christopher Pincher replaced during reshuffle | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: NEWSFLASH: Housing minister Christopher Pincher replaced during reshuffle
Meet Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) Landlord tax planning strategies – PIN Nottingham
Our Hon. Legal Counsel, Mark Smith, Head of Chambers at Cotswold Barristers, will be presenting an overview of several landlords tax strategies at the pin Nottingham meeting Tuesday 15th February.
The Nottingham pin Meeting is now returning to its physical venue De Vere Orchard Hotel
View Full Article: Meet Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) Landlord tax planning strategies – PIN Nottingham
Pets most commonly concealed from landlords
It is now the anniversary of the UK government changing the law to give pet owners more freedom to rent, and Quintain Living has released a new study focusing on renting with pets in the UK.
View Full Article: Pets most commonly concealed from landlords
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