Tenants are now spending two-thirds of their disposable income on rent as sky-high prices put even more homes out of reach.
The latest Landbay Rental Index has revealed that the average rent for a one-bedroom property reached £1,010 in August compared to a typical disposable income of £1,497.
The proportion of monthly income spent on rent is unsurprisingly the highest in London, where a one-bedroom flat now costs an average of £1,461pcm to rent, compared to an average disposable income of £1,967, which means 74% of pay in the capital is going towards rent.
Outside of London, this proportion is significantly lower, with just 41% of post-tax income handed over to the landlord each month.
John Goodall, CEO and founder of Landbay, said: “The buy to let market is a vital part of the UK’s housing mix, and rental properties have become an important stepping stone for first time buyers saving up for their own home.
“However, with a rapidly growing population and a chronic undersupply of new houses, property prices are growing even further out of reach for aspiring homeowners. With rents climbing too, even in the face of Brexit uncertainty, tenants saving up for a house face a triple challenge in trying to catch up with the pace of house price inflation, with more and more of their income spent on rent, and record low interest rates limiting their ability to save money.”
Overall, rents across the UK grew by a modest 0.12% in August, taking annual growth to 1.83%, according to Landbay.
Goodall added: “With a new prime minister, a new chancellor, and a new London mayor, bold new steps should be taken to fix the UK’s housing crisis. It must be high on the agenda at the upcoming Autumn Statement, especially given that rising rents are partly due to stamp duty increases being passed on renters. Phillip Hammond’s fiscal plan should also give more support to savers struggling to find a rewarding home for their money in this protracted period of record low interest rates.”
UK Rental Index
AUGUST 16
|
YoY %
|
MoM %
|
Av. £
|
UK
|
1.83
|
0.12
|
1,186
|
England
|
1.84
|
0.12
|
1,218
|
Scotland
|
1.82
|
0.22
|
718
|
Wales
|
1.41
|
0.04
|
631
|
London
|
1.00
|
-0.01
|
1,892
|
UK without London
|
2.29
|
0.20
|
745
|
UK Rental Index by number of beds
|
One bed
|
Two bed
|
Three bed
|
|
YoY %
|
MoM
%
|
Av. £
|
YoY
%
|
MoM
%
|
Av. £
|
YoY
%
|
MoM
%
|
Av. £
|
UK
|
1.67
|
0.09
|
1,010
|
1.78
|
0.12
|
1,149
|
2.07
|
0.18
|
1,314
|
England
|
1.66
|
0.08
|
1,044
|
1.79
|
0.11
|
1,184
|
2.10
|
0.18
|
1,335
|
Scotland
|
1.67
|
0.26
|
542
|
1.79
|
0.22
|
684
|
2.06
|
0.17
|
1,104
|
Wales
|
2.16
|
0.10
|
536
|
1.46
|
-0.03
|
647
|
1.40
|
0.16
|
605
|
London
|
0.79
|
-0.05
|
1,461
|
0.80
|
-0.04
|
1,938
|
1.44
|
0.08
|
2,702
|
UK without London
|
2.40
|
0.20
|
588
|
2.29
|
0.20
|
703
|
2.28
|
0.21
|
810
|
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You ain't seen nothing yet. Wait until Tenants also have to pay the George Osborne #TenantTax as well! Not a few percent but 20-30% more.
Exactly. Consumers not suppliers eventually pay the cost of all rises in overheads or taxation. The latest increases probably haven't filtered through to rents yet.
Its comments like that which give landlords a bad name. Also the phrase Tenant Tax is a complete misrepresentation. In reality S. 24 is a partial removal of tax relief on Landlords. Its landlords who chose to raise their rents during a long period of record low interest rates where they are paying far less on their mortgages.
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