Forget millennials, the number of renters aged 50 and over has reached a record high.
Analysis of Countrywide branch data by Hamptons International found that over-50s accounted for 15% of rented households so far this year, up from 11% in 2012 when the data was first recorded.
Almost a third of this group are pensioners, Hamptons International said.
The agent estimates that over-50s rented 791,580 homes this year, 61% more than in 2012 and 8.2% more than last year.
As a result, it says, this group will pay £9.2bn in rent this year, up from £5.1bn in 2012 and £8.5bn in 2018.
It means that £1 in every £7 paid by tenants in Great Britain now comes from a tenant aged over 50, compared with £1 in every £9 in 2012.
The highest proportion of these renters were in the south-east at 19%, followed by 16% in the south-west and north-west.
The east of England, London and Yorkshire & Humber (11%) had the lowest proportion of tenants aged 50 and over.
Across all age groups, the agent said average rents on new lets rose 2.6% annually in May to £977 per month, mainly driven by rises in the south.
Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at Hamptons International, said: “The number of over-50s renting in Great Britain has reached a record high.
“With younger generations much less likely to be home owners, tenants are getting older, and an ever more diverse group of people are calling the rented sector home.”
May-19 | May-18 | Annual rental growth | |
Greater London | £ 1,716 | £ 1,664 | 3.10% |
South East | £ 1,061 | £ 1,036 | 2.40% |
South West | £ 814 | £ 783 | 4.00% |
East | £ 945 | £ 950 | -0.50% |
Midlands | £ 686 | £ 675 | 1.60% |
North | £ 628 | £ 621 | 1.10% |
Wales | £ 666 | £ 667 | -0.10% |
Scotland | £ 651 | £ 631 | 3.20% |
Great Britain | £ 977 | £ 952 | 2.60% |
Great Britain (Excluding London) | £ 782 | £ 770 | 1.60% |
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