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‘Bills Included’ now key for many potential renters - claim

A new analysis of the market released by Rightmove shows that this year has been the most competitive on record. 

At its peak, there were quadruple the number of tenants enquiring about properties to move to, as there were properties to rent.

Rightmove’s ‘whole of market’ data on buyer, seller, tenant and landlord behaviour has also tracked shifts in what tenants are looking for this year.

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Tenant searches for bills are up 57 per cent compared with this time last year. The significant increase in searches reflects greater concern from tenants about their energy bills, and increased interest in properties that can include bills within the monthly rent.

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s property expert says: “Tenants have shown through their search behaviour how appealing a home with bills included could be. Any landlord who is able to offer this added incentive next year, is likely to be met with an orderly queue of ready-to-go tenants to choose from.”

On the sales side, Rightmove notes that while during the pandemic, more people were looking for their next home outside of cities, in the countryside or by the Cornish coast, that has now reversed.

The portal says buyer search behaviour is back at more normal pre-pandemic patterns. Searches for London increased by nine per cent compared with 2021, while searches for Cornwall dropped by 18 per cent and by 17 per cent in Devon.

London has 36 per cent more buyer searches than Cornwall at the end of the year, which is the biggest gap since 2019. This compares to last year when there was just a three per cent gap in number of searches between London and Cornwall.

Bannister adds: “This year people searching for their next home have well and truly returned to the capital – we started to see the tide turning towards the end of last year, and throughout 2022 a lot of our trends in the market have started to head back towards where they were in 2019.“

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    Surely landlords would have to fix a very high rent to cover what bills might be going forward or face the strong possibility of making a lose , I'll leave tenants to pay their own bills

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    No Landlord is going to take on open-ended risk unless the bills allowance is huge or they're stupid.
    My student properties have a fairly reasonable bills allowance but any excess is charged back to the tenant. Still not ideal for me given the potential credit exposure but I'm OK with that risk.

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    A brave landlord indeed would go into the ‘ bills included’ game, it would be akin to Russian Roulette 😬☠️

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