National rogue landlord database hits ‘new high’ of just 61 names
Four years after it was launched, the number on the Rogue Landlord database has only crept up to 61 out of the thousands claimed to be operating within the private rental sector, the latest government figures show.
Asked by opposition MP Gill Furniss to provide an update, Housing Minister Eddie Hughes revealed that of those 30 councils who have put landlords on the database, Camden had reported the highest number with 10 landlords, followed by Liverpool and Salford (four), Bournemouth, Hinkley & Bosworth, Telford & Wrekin and Walsall (three).
The database is designed to enable local authorities to target the most prolific offenders – those who have been convicted of banning order offences or have received at least two financial penalties within 12 months. It also aims to encourage joint working to tackle rogue landlords working across council divisions.
Funding gap
However, many councils lack the funds to chase up rogue or criminal landlords, or the resources to identify landlords who meet the criteria. It has led to many calls questioning whether the list is of any use, and has informed criticism of the government’s current plans to introduce a national landlord database.
According to The Times, the government is set to announce a new national register of landlords this week as part of its levelling up legislation, with plans to eject rogue operators.
At the time of the Rogue Landlord database launch in April 2018, ministers said there were approximately 10,500 rogue landlords operating within the private rental sector.
Housing campaigners claim the government has hugely underestimated the numbers involved and believe a model similar to the GLA landlord checker would be more practical as this shares information over neighbouring London boroughs.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – National rogue landlord database hits ‘new high’ of just 61 names | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: National rogue landlord database hits ‘new high’ of just 61 names
OFFICIAL: Action needed to woo back private landlords as stock dwindles alarmingly
New landlords should be enticed into the sector as rental stock dips across the UK, says industry body Propertymark.
Its latest PRS report reveals that member agents had an average of just six properties that were empty and available for rent in each branch, while in London it was only four – a 71% drop from last December when the figure stood at 14.
The average number of new prospective tenants in December was the highest on record for the month, at 67 per branch; regionally, the West Midlands had the highest number with 106 and the lowest was in Wales where an average of 21 new prospective tenants registered last month.
The number of properties managed per member agent branch dropped from 212 in November to 204 in December, in line with the previous year. Humberside had the highest recorded number with an average of 313, while London – with an average of 131 properties managed per branch – had the lowest.
Propertymark reports that 56% of member agents reported rent prices increasing, which is an overall fall for the fourth consecutive month.

CEO Nathan Emerson (pictured) says as the private rented sector was under the microscope of policy makers last year and house prices boomed, some landlords decided to exit and consider other options.
“It’s important that new landlords are enticed into the market to provide much-needed homes,” he explains. “In particular, the London market has been uniquely affected by the pandemic with many people leaving the city as commuting routines relaxed.
“What we are seeing now is as people look to return to London, the landlords that were there before have left also. The lack of homes not only pushes up prices but puts more pressure on to social housing systems.”
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – OFFICIAL: Action needed to woo back private landlords as stock dwindles alarmingly | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: OFFICIAL: Action needed to woo back private landlords as stock dwindles alarmingly
BREAKING: Renting reforms to be in this week’s ‘Levelling Up’ laws announcement
Plans to force private landlords to join a national register and join a redress scheme have been rolled up into the government’s new ‘levelling up’ legislation to be announced on Wednesday which will include an aim to halve the number of poorly-rented homes by 2030.
Housing secretary Michael Gove (pictured) is set to announce the legislation this week that will include plans to see rogue landlords ejected from the database, according to a report in The Times.
The new law would also task landlords with bringing their properties up to a national standard, with about 800,000 forced to refit homes.
All private renters will also be given a right to redress for complaints. The English Housing Survey in 2019 estimated that 1.1 million properties in the sector did not meet the ‘decent homes standard’ and The Times reports that a source in the levelling-up department said 34% of homes in Yorkshire and Humber did not meet the standard compared to 17% in the South East.
Big changes
Gove is reportedly looking to bring the PRS in line with the social housing sector which could also mean introducing new measures on energy efficiency as well as a minimum standard of fixtures and fittings for furnished accommodation. Another shake-up for the PRS is due later this year in the upcoming Renters Reform White Paper.
The wider levelling-up policy to be announced on Wednesday includes plans to transform derelict sites in towns and city centres by creating new homes and jobs across England.
Wolverhampton and Sheffield will be the first of 20 places to get government support, as part of its £1.5 billion Brownfield Fund, in an initiative spearheaded by Homes England.
Meanwhile, its £1.5bn Levelling Up Home Building Fund will provide loans to small and medium-sized builders and developers to deliver 42,000 homes, and another £120 million worth of funding will be given to seven mayoral combined authorities to transform derelict brownfield sites and build thousands of new homes
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – BREAKING: Renting reforms to be in this week’s ‘Levelling Up’ laws announcement | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: BREAKING: Renting reforms to be in this week’s ‘Levelling Up’ laws announcement
Top savings deals vanish
The start of 2022 has seen some of the top rate deals vanish from the saving market, according to the latest analysis by Moneyfacts.co.uk. Indeed, since the start of January, both market-leading deals and several deals that placed in the top 10 have been withdrawn.
View Full Article: Top savings deals vanish
Tricky lease situation/nightmare?
Hi, I realise I need professional assistance for this, which I plan to do in the following weeks, but I am wondering if anyone has any advice.
– I bought a property with a short lease of 26 years remaining.
View Full Article: Tricky lease situation/nightmare?
Ending ground rents for new, qualifying long residential leasehold properties
Leasehold reform in motion with the first groundbreaking leaseholder reforms becoming legislation, ending ground rents for new, qualifying long residential leasehold properties.
Independent Buying Agents, Haringtons, reflects on the long-requested need to transform leasehold agreements and what impact this will have on the property sector.
View Full Article: Ending ground rents for new, qualifying long residential leasehold properties
Why are Ministers using cladding as another stick to beat landlords?
Landlords have slammed the government’s leasehold reform plans as ‘riddled with confusion and unnecessary delays’ after it was revealed recently that landlords may be excluded from the latest cladding remediation fund.
That is the message NRLA chief Ben Beadle (main pic) is due to tell MPs when he is quizzed by a committee of MPs later today.
Beadle will also say how many landlords were shocked to discover that, while homeowners are to be given £4 billion to pay for cladding remediation on buildings between 11 and 18 metres high, the government has yet to reveal whether this will include landlords.
And yet, in a recent parliamentary answer, Secretary of State Michael Gove revealed that ‘accidental landlords’ who sublet properties because they cannot sell them due to dangerous cladding will be included in the Government’s scheme.
The NRLA is warning that the Government’s plans are not treating all leaseholders equally. In the process they also risk delaying remedial work on dangerous cladding as the Government seeks to understand who may be an accidental or a buy-to-let landlord.
Speaking ahead of his appearance before the Select Committee, Beadle says: “It makes no sense to be treating leaseholders who are landlords so differently to owner-occupiers.
“Both groups have faced the same problems, and both should be treated equally. We are calling on the Government to rectify this injustice as a matter of urgency.”
Case in point
As part of its campaign, the NRLA has highlighted the case of landlord Ian Davies in Cardiff, who for the past six years has rented out a flat on the fifth floor of a six-storey building to bolster his pension.
He recently found out that the building is covered with flammable timber cladding panels and the whole block has compartmentation issues.
As a result, the six-monthly management fee he pays has increased from £700 to £3,000, completely outweighing his rental income, and now he has ‘serious concerns’ about the lack of support for residential landlords along with the rising costs of service charges and waking watch expenses.
Beadle is due to speak at 5pm and will be joined by Liam Spender from UK Cladding Action Group and Andrew Bulmer, CEO at Institute of Residential Property Management.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Why are Ministers using cladding as another stick to beat landlords? | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: Why are Ministers using cladding as another stick to beat landlords?
Happy Tax Day – BUT NOT FOR ALL
If you are a private (unincorporated) landlord, today is the last day to pay your tax on your rental profits for the 2020/21 tax year without incurring penalties.
Were you shocked at how much tax you paid?
Below is an example of a private rental business owner who consulted us last year.
View Full Article: Happy Tax Day – BUT NOT FOR ALL
LATEST: Luton finally brings in blanket HMO licensing after years of problems
Luton Council has finally got its act together and revealed blanket HMO licensing for the town after a number of false starts over the last few years.
HMOs of any size will now need a licence under its additional scheme which launches on 1st April, while all privately rented properties in South ward which aren’t HMOs will also need to be licensed under a new selective scheme.
The council has previously been thwarted by landlords and letting agents as well as its own ineptitude. Luton tried to introduce a scheme in 2018 when its previous additional licensing scheme ended, but faced significant local opposition and then went silent about its plans until December 2019 when its executive committee rubber-stamped them.
However, a group of agents, landlords and concerned residents got together and formed Luton Landlords and Letting Agents Ltd, whose solicitor launched a legal challenge, forcing the council to admit errors in its implementation and decision making, and the scheme was put on hold.
Regulated

Councillor Tom Shaw, portfolio holder for housing (pictured), says the new measures will improve a lot of tenants throughout the town, giving them peace of mind that their premises are being regulated.
He adds: “The introduction of these measures raises the game of landlords too as they will need to comply with the law in order to continue renting out their properties.
“Other parts of the country that have introduced this type of selective licensing have experienced improvements in neighbourhoods, which have enhanced the quality of life for all residents and we anticipate the same happening here in Luton.”
The licence fee for an HMO with up to three bedrooms is £488 with an extra charge of £122 for each additional bedroom, while it’s a flat fee of £488 for a selective licence.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – LATEST: Luton finally brings in blanket HMO licensing after years of problems | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: LATEST: Luton finally brings in blanket HMO licensing after years of problems
EXPERT: What this week’s Court of Appeal win by landlord means in practice
A landmark Court of Appeal case with potentially calamitous consequences has cleared up uncertainty about who has the authority to sign section eight notices and deposit protection certificates, explains the lawyer representing the winning landlord company.
David Smith (pictured) of legal firm JMW says if the firm had lost the critical case earlier this week, it would have made business largely impractical and led to tenants making huge numbers of deposit claims against their landlord or letting agent.
“Recent possession orders obtained and not enforced could have been appealed, existing possession orders would have collapsed – it would have had a big impact on landlords across the country…with potentially widespread bankruptcies as a result,” says Smith.
Instead, it was a significant victory as Appeal Court judges found in favour of the landlord in Northwood Solihull v Fearn & Ors, which centred on the Solihull branch of letting and estate agency Northwood.
It had served a Section 8 eviction notice on tenants Mr Fearn and Ms Cooke who argued that this, as well as a certificate for their deposit, had not been signed by two authorised signatories or by a company director in the presence of a witness, but by another company employee instead.
Smith says the ruling means that if you’re a corporate landlord or agent acting in a corporate capacity, your employees can continue to sign documents on your behalf.
Tea maker
“As long as the employee has the authority to do so, for example, a property manager – however, if your job is to make tea then you probably don’t.”
He adds that the Court of Appeal has effectively ruled that it’s up to Parliament to protect tenants with laws: “It’s not for lawyers to come up with tricks to make it more difficult for landlords.”
The tenants have now sought permission to appeal to the Supreme Court although Smith doesn’t think the Appeal judges will give permission and expects that a section 21 will be served.
Reaction

Timothy Douglas, (pictured) Head of Policy and Campaigns, at trade body Propertymark says: “The decision by the Court of Appeal brings much needed clarity to a long-disputed area of the law and is a victory for common sense, which agents will welcome.
“The retrospective judgement from the High Court dangled the possibility for ramifications for the sector with a significant number of claims against agents. Due to the potential implications, Propertymark was pleased to contribute to the costs of the appeal by the landlord.
“The judgement does however go much wider and the same rational will surely apply to virtually every notice prepared for a corporate landlord, from Section 21 Notices to rent increase notices and even notices to quit.”
Watch David Smith talking more about the case.
Read the judgement in full.
©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – EXPERT: What this week’s Court of Appeal win by landlord means in practice | LandlordZONE.
View Full Article: EXPERT: What this week’s Court of Appeal win by landlord means in practice
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