A third of landlords to sell off homes

20 Dec 2019 01:06 PM

More than a third of private landlords are planning to cut the number of homes they rent out or exit the market altogether according to a new survey of over 2,000 landlords.

Almost 34% of landlords have indicated they intend to reduce their investment in the market – a 30% increase over the previous twelve months, according to the research conducted by the RLA. 

Just 12% of landlords are looking to expand the number of homes they rent out down from 14% a year ago. 

Demand

The fall in supply comes despite the Royal Institution for Chartered Surveyors (RICS) warning that the demand for private rented homes is outstripping supply. Rightmove has spoken of there being “strong demand” from tenants.  

45 per cent of landlords told the RLA that the Stamp Duty Levy on additional properties had been a deterrent to further investment in property.

Professor David Miles, a former member of the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee, has previously warned: “aspiring first-time buyers are hardly helped by squeezing the supply of rental property and driving rents up.”

Budget

With Ministers pledged to introduce a Budget early next year, the RLA is calling on the government to scrap the Stamp Duty Levy where landlords provide homes adding to the net supply of housing.

“This should include developing new build properties, bringing empty homes back into use and converting larger properties into smaller, more affordable units of accommodation. 

David Smith, RLA policy director, said: “This is yet more, clear evidence of the sell-off of private rented housing largely due to the government’s extra tax on new rental homes. 

“It is ridiculous that when the country needs all the extra housing it can get, it penalises good landlords who invest in new homes. 

“With a new government and a Budget due, we need a shift in policy to one that supports investment because otherwise there will be a growing supply crisis in the private rented sector as demand continues to rise.”