Spring statement missed opportunity for renters

27 Mar 2025 11:45 AM

The Chancellor’s Spring Statement has failed to address the urgent challenges facing the private rented sector. Despite repeated warnings from industry experts, today’s announcement did nothing to boost rental supply, support investment in energy efficiency, or provide much-needed relief for tenants reliant on housing benefits.

With demand for rental homes at an all-time high—an average of 12 renters now chasing every available property—this was a key moment for the Government to act. Instead, it has chosen to overlook the rapidly worsening crisis.

Responding to the Chancellor’s Spring Statement, Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the National Residential Landlords Association, said:

“Today’s statement was a missed opportunity to support renters across the country.

“It has done nothing to tackle the chronic shortage of rental housing to meet demand. 

“It has done nothing to reform a broken tax system which is failing to encourage and support investment in energy efficiency improvements.  

“And it has done nothing to address the unjust freeze on housing benefit which is leaving so many renters fearful of how they will afford their rents.”

Notes:

“Currently the major energy efficiency programmes are targeted at the owner occupier sector (e.g. Energy Company Obligation, Home Upgrade Grant, Great British Insulation Scheme) or the SRS (Social Housing Decarbonisation Fund). Previously the Committee on Fuel Poverty argued that the PRS be treated as a commercial sector as landlords are effectively managing a business that should meet required standards. Landlords could be helped to meet these standards through tax offsets for improvements, loans or potentially grants for landlords with a low profit margin in areas of low rental value.”