Browsing all articles tagged with agents Archives - Page 790 of 1263 - LettingLinks - Connecting Landlords & Tenants
Feb
10

Title restriction – Could Bank pull the plug?

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

I am in the process of the purchase of a traditionally built 3 bed house freehold title. I Am using a new solicitor on this banks panel. We are near the end of the conveyance with mortgage offer, searches done etc.

The post Title restriction – Could Bank pull the plug? appeared first on Property118.

View Full Article: Title restriction – Could Bank pull the plug?

Feb
10

Four-legged fail! Our poll shows less than half of landlords accept pets

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

The government is preparing to make its model tenancy more pet friendly, but will landlords pay any attention?

As the government
prepares to reveal its revised model tenancy agreement to an expectant landlord
community, a poll by LandlordZONE reveals less than half are prepared to accept
pets.

During a poll of
landlords conducted across social media over the weekend, just 48.3% said
they’d rent properties to tenants with moggies and doggies.

Such a low acceptance
level may be shocking to campaigners and pet-owning tenants alike, but it’s an
improvement on the current private rental market, where research among listings
shows that, at best, 90% of properties advertised to rent say ‘no pets
allowed’.

Lettings agency
Benham & Reeves recently revealed that its research showed just 7% of
landlords actively welcomed pets even though 44% of households in the UK have
them.

The company also
warns that it believes more landlords will say no to pets despite the expected
changes to the model tenancy.

“Since the government
banned tenant fees capping deposits at no more than five weeks’ rent, landlords
have been left with no wiggle room when it comes to the potential damage caused
by pets,” says boss Marc von Grundherr.

“As a result, 90% of
our landlords are now saying no to pets with many of those already within a
rental property being notified they will have to leave once they reach the
renewal stage.”

As
LandlordZone reported
last week
, the updated model tenancy is expected to be published at
any moment and will ask landlords to consider tenants with pets much more
strongly within its guidance.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Four-legged fail! Our poll shows less than half of landlords accept pets | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Four-legged fail! Our poll shows less than half of landlords accept pets

Feb
10

Fines totalling £120,000 follow fatal fire at unlicenced HMO

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Landlord, two agents and letting agency each fined £30,000 highlighting tragic and expensive consequences of ignoring local HMO rules.

Agents and a
landlord who showed callous
disregard for their tenants’ safety have each been handed a maximum fine of
£30,000 after a fatal fire at their unlicensed property.

Agents Narinder and Joginder Singh, their company Homeseekers Ltd
and the landlord, failed to licence the property in Saxon Road, Southall, as an
HMO.

Serious safety
failings there led to the death of 17-year-old Nancy Kaur, who died from smoke
inhalation during a fire in January 2019.

The property,
built as a three-bedroom semi-detached house, but illegally converted into a
five-bedroom HMO, was home to ten people at the time of the fire, including a
family of five who were all sleeping in one room.

After the fire, Ealing council officers discovered the house lacked even basic fire safety measures, had no fire alarm or fire doors, smoke seals on the doors or emergency lighting. 

Fire spread

This had caused smoke to spread rapidly through the house, affecting the tenants, including the teenager and her mother, who remains hospitalised. Two other children were also seriously injured but have since recovered.

Ealing Council says if the owner and agents had applied for the council license, it would have required them to immediately install basic fire safety measures such as smoke alarms. 

The landlord decided to accept and pay his penalty but Homeseekers Ltd and the two agents, who are directors of the company, appealed. However, a residential property tribunal has upheld all three maximum penalties.

Councillor Joanna Camadoo-Rothwell, Ealing Council’s lead member for community safety and inclusion, says: “The harm that arose stemmed directly from the owner and agent’s failure to licence the property, which they deliberately avoided doing because they knew the house was unfit. The landlord and agents showed callous disregard for the safety of their tenants.”

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Fines totalling £120,000 follow fatal fire at unlicenced HMO | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Fines totalling £120,000 follow fatal fire at unlicenced HMO

Feb
10

Wales: 12-month contracts, the Minister’s statement in full

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Twelve-month contracts are set to become mandatory in Wales under a new law announced today. The RLA has warned many landlords could leave the market, for fear of being stuck with  whose tenants are not paying the rent, are making neighbours lives a misery or wilfully damaging the property.  Julie James AM , the Minister for […]

The post Wales: 12-month contracts, the Minister’s statement in full appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

View Full Article: Wales: 12-month contracts, the Minister’s statement in full

Feb
10

Meet Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) at NPN’s first event of 2020

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Norfolk Property Network’s first meeting of 2020 will be Wednesday 19th February at the Oaklands Hotel Norwich. I will be joined by Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) Hon legal Counsel to Property118 and the co-designer of a range of solutions for business structures wherever you are on your property career.

The post Meet Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) at NPN’s first event of 2020 appeared first on Property118.

View Full Article: Meet Mark Smith (Barrister-At-Law) at NPN’s first event of 2020

Feb
10

Should letting agents be paid to refer services to landlords?

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Two key regulators ask estate agents to give their thoughts as industry faces ‘last chance saloon’ on referral fees.

A ban on referral fees paid
by third parties to estate agents for recommending services to landlords has
taken a step closer towards reality following an update from the Trading
Standards Estate and Letting Agency Team and the Property Ombudsman published
late on Friday.

The two organisations have
asked estate agents to consider whether they would prefer partial or total
disclosure of fees to landlords when doing business, and whether a total ban
would be appropriate.

The current Trading Standards
guidance issued last year only warns agents that they must reveal referral fees
or ‘risk prosecution’, but any government proposals on future legislation have
yet to be revealed.

But tackling the shady world
of referral fees has become a government priority as it bids to bring greater
transparency and fairness to the housing market.

The government wants
landlords to be able to shop around for services based on an unbiased
recommendation or, at the very least, for the referral fees earned by the agent
to be made clear.

This is alongside other
measures being considered including whether to regulate sales and lettings
agencies, how to reform the leasehold system and plans to force landlords to
join a national register in England, as they are already required to do in
Wales and Scotland.

Fees are earned by letting
agencies in a variety of ways across both sales and lettings.

This includes fees for referring landlords to conveyancers, inventory
companies, referencing agencies, mortgage providers and maintenance and repairs
firms.

©1999 – Present | Parkmatic Publications Ltd. All rights reserved | LandlordZONE® – Should letting agents be paid to refer services to landlords? | LandlordZONE.

View Full Article: Should letting agents be paid to refer services to landlords?

Feb
10

Proposed EPC band C by 2024 for Scottish homeowners

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Scottish Government have issued a further consultation to mandate EPC Band C on all homeowner’s properties offered for sale or which undergo major renovation by 2024, 6 years ahead of the previous target of 2030.

The current average rating in Scotland is D61

The post Proposed EPC band C by 2024 for Scottish homeowners appeared first on Property118.

View Full Article: Proposed EPC band C by 2024 for Scottish homeowners

Feb
10

Year-long contracts to be made mandatory by the Welsh Government

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Twelve-month contracts are set to become mandatory in Wales under a new law announced today. Landlords will be unable to serve notice during the first six months of a new let under the Renting Homes (Amendment) (Wales) Bill, with the subsequent notice period extending from two to six months. The combined effect means it will […]

The post Year-long contracts to be made mandatory by the Welsh Government appeared first on RLA Campaigns and News Centre.

View Full Article: Year-long contracts to be made mandatory by the Welsh Government

Feb
9

The optimal business structure for UK landlords

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

Taking professional advice on the optimal ownership structure for UK landlords is arguably the most overlooked aspect of their financial planning.

It is probably fair to say that most landlords do a fair amount of reseach when buying properties to consider the potential for capital appreciation and cashflow.

The post The optimal business structure for UK landlords appeared first on Property118.

View Full Article: The optimal business structure for UK landlords

Feb
8

Are fines to landlords disproportionate to the crime?

Author admin    Category Uncategorized     Tags

How much do people get fined for driving a vehicle without a driving licence?

I ask this question because recently a landlord was fined £90,000 for not having licences despite his properties being faultless!

It makes me think that no landlord should take the risk of owning properties in their own personal names these days

The post Are fines to landlords disproportionate to the crime? appeared first on Property118.

View Full Article: Are fines to landlords disproportionate to the crime?

Categories

Archives

Calendar

April 2026
M T W T F S S
« Mar    
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  

Recent Posts

Quick Search

RSS More from Letting Links

Facebook Fan Page