HomeLet: Rents 10.5% up on last year

HomeLet: Rents 10.5% up on last year


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The rate of rent price increases across the UK is slowing – but rents are still 10.5% higher than a year ago.

According to the latest figures from the HomeLet Rental Index, the average tenancy signed during the three months to August 2015 charged a rent of £992 per month. In Greater London the figure stood at £1,558 a month.

However, the pace of rent rises slowed and in some regions retracted over the three months to August 2015, compared to the previous three-month period.

Overall, the average UK rent on new tenancies increased 1.6% in the three months to August 2015, compared to an increase of 2.2% for the three months to July and June 2015.

In the three months to August 2015, with the exception of Wales, where rents rose by 2.5%, no region saw rents increase by more than 2%. Three regions – the South East, North West and North East of England – saw rents fall during this period; the biggest fall was in the North East, where rents paid for new tenancies in the three months to August 2015 were, on average, 2.1% lower than in the three months to July.

Martin Totty, Barbon Insurance Group’s chief executive officer, said: “Rents continue to run slightly ahead of house prices, with the majority of the UK still experiencing rising rents, albeit at a much slower pace than we saw in the early part of 2015.

“On an annualised basis, however, rents in most regions are still significantly higher than the same period a year ago, with only the North West reporting lower rents for new tenancies in the three months to August 2015 than for the same period last year.”

“Broadly we are continuing to see a robust rental market with rent prices continuing to rise. This picture is consistent right across the UK with only one or two exceptions, such as East Anglia, where prices rose sharply in 2014 and early 2015 but have now slowed notably, and the South West, which continues to see annual price rises in double figures.

“We now ask ourselves: will the next few months see the pace of rent price growth resume, or has this slowing set the tone for the rest of 2015?”

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