Ministers failing to tackle the rent debt crisis – NRLA

One year on from the first ban on the repossession of rented homes, new analysis shows that in the long term more tenants are likely to lose their homes.

Research for the National Residential Landlords Association has shown that there are an estimated 840,000 private tenants who have built rent arrears since lockdown measures began.

With no action possible against them, these debts are increasing to the point where there is no hope of many being able to afford to pay them back. The outcome will be that most will have to leave their homes as emergency measures taper down from June.

On top of this, the damage such debts could have on credit scores will cause tenants difficulties when wanting to move home.

Although most landlords have been working with struggling tenants to help keep them in their homes as far as possible, 60 per cent have lost rental income as a result of the pandemic. Of these, 39 per cent said the losses were continuing to increase.

The situation for landlords is being made worse by the strains that the courts are now under in hearing the relatively few cases that are being allowed to go ahead.

It is taking an average of a year from a private landlord making a claim to repossess a property to it being enforced. This is despite cases currently being considered by the courts being the most serious including those related to tenant anti-social behaviour and other criminal activity and where rent arrears were building before lockdown measures started last year.

With the Government now working to taper down emergency restrictions in the sector, the NRLA is renewing its call for an urgent financial package to pay off rent debts built as a result of the pandemic.

Government guaranteed, interest free hardship loans should be available for the majority of tenants now in arrears but who do not qualify for benefit support. Grants should be made available for those in receipt of benefits.

NRLA is also calling on the courts to make much better use of video technology to ensure that legitimate possession cases can be heard more swiftly. This would make it easier for tenants to attend hearings (which currently very few do in person). It should be matched to also ensuring that they can access legal advice and support much earlier in the process than at present.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the National Residential Landlords Association, said:

“Whilst many landlords and tenants have worked well in responding to the challenges posed by the pandemic, we are now at a crunch point. As the country follows the roadmap out of lockdown, so too emergency measures in the rental market will need to be eased.

“Ministers need to ensure the tenants have the financial means to pay off rent debts built as a result of the pandemic. Without this they will have to accept the inevitable consequence of rising homelessness and damaged credit scores.”

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One Comment

  1. paulgbar666

    There will be very few damaged credit scores as a result of rent defaulting while S21 remains.   The reason!?   The Civil Recovery Process is useless and few LL will bother spending more money on CCJ which will never work.   LL have little alternative than to suck it up. Mind you when S21 is abolished every S8 repossession for rent defaulting will result in EVERY rent defaulting tenant being evicted because of this. This will result in an automatic CCJ.   When you think such feckless rent defaulting tenants cost LL over £9 billion per year all those losses will now be applied as CCJ to those feckless tenants.   This will mean that LL will invariably be rejecting those feckless tenants as everyone of them will have a CCJ. Perhaps such feckless tenants will rue the day S21 was abolished!!!!!??   I have no idea how many feckless tenants cause the average £9 billion of losses per year but once only the S8 process remains then every year hundreds of thousands of those feckless tenants will have CCJ for rent defaulting. After a few years there will be literally millions of those feckless rent defaulting tenants with CCJ which few LL will wish to take on. RGI will be impossible even if a CCJ is satisfied. So where will all these feckless rent defaulters live!? I guess it will be LL prepared to take on such rent defaulting tenants. I wouldn’t be one of them but it does make you wonder why any LL would choose to take on any of these rent defaulting tenants. I guess those LL will make their relevant business decisions. But there is no doubt when S21 is abolished life will become very difficult for feckless rent defaulting tenants.      

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