Record migration fuelling Britain’s rental crisis, warns Zoopla chief

Richard Donnell, executive director of Zoopla, has blamed record migration for UK rent crisis this year.

Richard Donnell

He told the Telegraph that renting was the ‘first port of call’ for most people who moved to the UK, putting pressure on the supply of rental properties and driving up rents.

He said that many landlords were leaving the sector due to tax changes and regulatory reforms, creating a shortage of rental homes.

According to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS), net migration to the UK reached a record 745,000 in 2022, meaning that more people arrived than left the country.

In the two years to June 2023, nearly 1.3 million people immigrated to the UK, mostly from outside the EU.

Donnell explained: “We have a triple whammy on the demand side, one element of which is migration.”

He also points to the number of international students heading into the UK – but there is not enough purpose-built student accommodation (PBSA) to cope.

The ONS says that 263,000 international students came to the UK in the year to June, mainly from India and China.

He commented: “And so you get an overspill of that student demand into the private rented sector.”

Donnell said that one in 10 homes that are advertised on Zoopla are being sold by a private landlord.

He continued: “The total number of private rented homes in this country is stuck at 5.5m and it has been for the last seven years.”

Donnell also told the newspaper that some migrants would buy their home eventually, but many remain in the rental sector for longer than usual due to high interest rates and house prices.

In addition, he said that a strong jobs market was fuelling demand for rental accommodation, as more people moved for work.

The latest ONS data showed that rents across the UK increased by a record 8.4% in the year to October 2023, the highest annual growth rate since the series began in 2015.

The average rent in the UK was £1,029 per month in October, up from £949 a year earlier.

 

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3 Comments

  1. MrManyUnits

    Somebody had better explain this slowly to Michael Gove and the rest of the self rewarding fools in Westminster. .

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    1. Scottish_Mist42

      As a Scottish agent I’ll see your Michael Gove and raise you Patrick Harvie…

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  2. Robert_May

    The fact a lot homes that were AST are now short break party pads that compete directly with hotels, guest houses and B&B accommodation seems to be being over looked.

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