Buy-to-let landlords are facing mounting pressure, prompting fresh concerns about the future supply of rental housing as tenant demand remains strong.
“A balanced approach is needed to ensure improvements to housing standards can be delivered without discouraging investment or reducing the availability of much-needed rental homes,” said Megan Eighteen, president of ARLA Propertymark.
Her comments come ahead of the Renters’ Rights Act, due to take effect on 1 May, and follow new figures from Moneyfactscompare showing a sharp rise in buy-to-let mortgage rates amid wider economic uncertainty. Average two- and five-year fixed rates have both climbed since early March, with the two-year rate reaching 5.40%—its highest level in a year—and the five-year rate rising to 5.91%, a two-year high.
The increase is feeding directly into landlords’ costs. Monthly repayments on a typical £250,000 loan over 25 years are now around £1,100 higher than at the start of the month. At the same time, product choice has tightened significantly, with around 1,300 buy-to-let mortgage deals withdrawn since March, taking total availability to below 5,000 for the first time since November 2025.
Further financial pressures are expected, with landlords preparing for incoming rental reforms and potential energy efficiency upgrades that could cost up to £10,000 per property to meet minimum EPC C standards by 2030.


Last weeks of issuing Section 21’s,, I can’t see this ending well for tenants.
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