Surging room rents leave affordability ‘at breaking point’

Room rents across the UK have surged over the past five years, stretching affordability and forcing many renters to rethink where and how they live. New analysis from SpareRoom shows sharp increases in major cities, with some areas seeing far steeper rises than others.

Among the UK’s 20 largest cities, Belfast has recorded the biggest jump, with average room rents rising 53% between Q4 2020 and Q4 2025. The increase means tenants there are now paying around £2,460 more per year than they were five years ago.

Close behind Belfast are Newcastle (+52%) and Cardiff (+50%). Rents in the Welsh capital hit a record high of £666 per month in Q4 2025.

Broadly speaking, rents in many cities, including London and Belfast, are now showing signs of stabilisation, but are still largely unaffordable because none have seen significant rent decreases.

But that is not the case in all cities. Liverpool saw room rents hit a record high of £555 per month in Q4 2025 and it has also seen the biggest year-on-year increase, of 5.5%.

Today, Bradford (£472) and Hull (£512) offer the cheapest monthly room rents across the top 20 cities but, year on year, rents in Hull are rising 4.5%.

Coventry (+25%) might have seen the smallest five-year rent rise of all the major cities, but rents here are still increasing 2% year on year – one of the highest increases across the 20 biggest cities. Manchester (-3.7%) and Edinburgh (-3.6%) have seen the biggest year-on-year rent drops but some of the highest five-year increases, upwards of 40%.

The table below ranks the UK’s biggest cities by their five-year rent change, and also shows their year-on-year increases:

UK’s 20 biggest cities Q4 2025 average monthly room rent Q4 2024 average monthly room rent Q4 2020 average monthly room rent 1-year change 5-year change
1 Belfast £589 £589 £384 0.0% 53.2%
2 Newcastle £605 £615 £399 -1.6% 51.7%
3 Cardiff £666 £664 £444 0.3% 49.9%
4 Glasgow £690 £695 £478 -0.7% 44.5%
5 Manchester £691 £717 £483 -3.7% 43.2%
6 Edinburgh £778 £807 £552 -3.6% 41.0%
7 Derby £585 £574 £415 1.9% 40.9%
8 Liverpool £555 £526 £398 5.5% 39.5%
9 Southampton £660 £666 £479 -0.8% 37.9%
10 Birmingham £618 £629 £452 -1.8% 36.8%
11 London £985 £993 £721 -0.9% 36.6%
12 Bristol £737 £737 £552 -0.1% 33.6%
13 Hull £512 £490 £386 4.5% 32.6%
14 Bradford £472 £475 £359 -0.7% 31.6%
15 Leicester £566 £563 £436 0.4% 29.6%
16 Brighton £750 £744 £582 0.8% 28.8%
17 Nottingham £589 £593 £459 -0.8% 28.1%
19 Leeds £565 £576 £445 -2.0% 26.9%
19 Sheffield £521 £528 £412 -1.3% 26.5%
20 Coventry £560 £550 £448 2.0% 25.2%
UK excluding inner London £670 £664 £494 0.9% 35.6%
Whole of UK £749 £745 £580 0.5% 29.0%

The 10-year graph below shows how the trajectory of rent rises in Belfast were altered by the pandemic from around mid-2021:

Matt Hutchinson, director at flatshare site SpareRoom, commented: “Flatsharing has long afforded people the opportunity to live in cities, but disproportionate rent increases in recent years have created a barrier to urban living for those at the sharp end of the housing crisis. Affordability has been stretched to breaking point, and it’s even changing the dynamics of shared households.

“Flatsharers are getting older as younger people are being priced out of the rental market altogether, and suburban housesharing is now increasingly common as more people are priced further out of cities too. It’s not knowledge workers who suffer most, it’s often the lowest-paid workers – including those in essential and key worker roles, hospitality and retail jobs – who keep our cities functioning.”

 

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2 Comments

  1. Jim S

    Rent increases all due to abusive taxation from the Government.

    Report
    1. Fromrichmond

      Nah Labour are the party of the underprivileged
      PMSL
      HO HO HO HO HO HO

      Report
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