Over three quarters of tenants concerned about their ability to pay the rent

More than three-quarters of people renting privately are concerned about the impact of the cost-of-living crisis on their ability to pay their rent, according to a new research.

The survey of over 12,000 tenants and 1,000 landlords, conducted by HomeLet with Dataloft, revealed that 78% of renters feel that cost-of-living increases will have a moderate to a significant impact on their ability to pay the rent. Some one in four renters rank this as their top concern in the next year, closely followed by worries about landlords increasing rent.

HomeLet says that rent accounts for an average of 30.5% of a renter’s gross monthly income in the UK, ranging from 23% in Northern Ireland to 34% in London. But with inflation at its highest rate for 40 years, many renters are set to feel the squeeze.

For landlords also, renters’ ability to pay tops the list of their concerns for the coming year. This was above concerns about the abolition of Section 21 notices and other taxation or legislative issues.

The landlord survey found that, while 36% of landlords have no plans to increase rents in the immediate future, over 40% are likely to raise rents as they too seek to cover rising costs and respond to current market pressure.

Andy Halstead, HomeLet CEO, commented: “Many people in Britain are facing a financial crisis. We have the perfect storm, ramping inflation, interest rate increases and war in Europe that exponentially impacts utility prices. Landlords know the pressure on tenants, but many landlords must increase the rent because the cost they face is growing. Landlords and Tenants are people; both groups are equally affected, as our letting agent businesses. Add to this crisis the government interventions, which make life even more difficult for all concerned in the rental sector.

“The rental market plays a critical role in satisfying the UK’s housing needs; there simply isn’t enough housing stock. Many landlords are choosing to exit the market, which only causes further strain on stock levels and letting agent businesses.

“The government’s commitment to legislation in the market through the Renters’ Reform Bill will provide the most significant change to rental law in a generation, and I can’t see any positives. We are in for a rough ride. Our commitment to taking the risk out of lettings has never been greater; the cost of rent guarantee is low, and the legal support that comes with rent guarantee is also crucially important. HomeLet, Let Alliance, and Rent4sure are here to support the needs of letting agents and their customers.”

Sandra Jones, managing director of Dataloft, added: “Landlords and tenants are part of the same ecosystem – it’s better for both sides when the system works well. If, as this survey clearly shows, there is widespread concern amongst tenants about rising costs and the potential impact on their ability to cover their rent, then it makes sense for landlords to be part of the solution.

“This is one area where I believe the institutional rental sector (Build-to-Rent) outperforms the private rental sector. Providers understand the importance of consistently managing customer expectations. They use their scale and resources to negotiate with utility suppliers, offering greater security and cost predictability. Build-to-Rent providers invest continuously in ways to improve the renter experience. Understanding what is on the renter’s mind is key to that, and right now, it is the rising cost-of-living.

“Whilst this kind of customer service is an acknowledged piece of the Build-to-Rent operational model, there’s an opportunity for managing agents to offer a similar level of professional management that puts the relationship at the heart of the landlord/tenant interaction. With costs and concerns rising, this is a time when all renters will value a professional and engaged relationship with their landlord.”

 

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2 Comments

  1. Woodentop

    6 months ago I predicted lettings industry will have a catastrophe this winter if landlords and reckless agents continue to hike up rents, knowing full well that the cost of living will reach a crisis point by then, and many are finding it now. Arrears will be tenfold?

     

    They have continued to hike rents. I’ve never seen so many un-warranted and frankly many are reckless. My experience is private DIY landlords in general haven’t a clue what ‘affordable’ means or how to accurately work it out. I see many agents advertising ‘find a tenant only service’ and no surprise there!

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  2. northernlandlord

    What about people with a recent Mortgages? Mortgage payments should not exceed 28% of gross income. So a lot of them will be paying out a similar amount to renters. However, “The landlord survey found that, while 36% of landlords have no plans to increase rents in the immediate future, over 40% are likely to raise rents as they too seek to cover rising costs and respond to current market pressure”, but I think that 100% of mortgage lenders will increase their rates to who knows where and you won’t get much sympathy from them if you don’t pay.
    Rent levels are subject to supply and demand just like house prices. The rent for a new tenancy just like a house price, is whatever the market can stand. If you ask too much nobody will buy. At present with a shortage of rental properties that is only going to get worse, there any many applicants for every rental and a landlord can name his price and chose the best tenant. If he overcooks the price nobody will go for it, so he must reduce until he gets more takers. Supply and demand in action.
    Silly rent prices are not silly if the prospective tenants are still queuing up. I don’t plan to put rents up unless push comes to shove. If PRS landlords lived up to their vilified image they would Section 21 all their good long term tenants and take a new tenant from the ever growing desperate queue and get 25-30% more.  We mostly don’t, as better the good tenant you know then the potentially evil tenant you don’t. Right now if any of my tenants leave I will just sell, forgoing the extra rent I would get, as  I am now getting on in life and don’t much like the look of the future and the hassle it will bring me.
    Maybe the future will be with institutionalised renters and all these current moves that seem designed to kill off the PRS have been orchestrated by them leaning on the Government who they have in their pockets. One thing for sure they won’t be letting anything to a benefits tenant for a few quid over LHA rates!

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