Half of landlords quitting or considering leaving rental sector

Half of landlords quitting or considering leaving rental sector


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The barrage of criticism, legislation and tax burdens aimed at landlords has resulted in almost half either actively leaving the rental sector, or considering doing so. 

A new survey by PropTech supplier Goodlord suggests 30% of landlords have either sold one of their rental properties or put one on the market in the past year. A further 17.4% of landlords say they are considering reducing their portfolio in the coming year. 

And more than half (58%) of letting agents reported a decrease in the number of available properties – with 37.4% noting a “significant” decrease.

When asked what was driving their desire to leave the market or reduce the size of their portfolio, more than half of landlords (56%) planning to downsize or exit the market said incoming legislation – such as the Renters’ Rights Bill, in particular the abolition of Section 21 – was the primary reason. Letting agents agree – two-thirds (66%) believe the new Bill will ultimately lead to fewer rental properties being available.

The survey also covers agents and tenants and other key findings include: 

Legislation driving landlord exodus – When asked what was driving their desire to leave the market or reduce the size of their portfolio, more than half of landlords (56%) planning to downsize or exit the market said incoming legislation – such as the Renters’ Rights Bill, in particular the abolition of Section 21 – was the primary reason. Letting agents agree – two-thirds (66%) believe the new Bill will ultimately lead to fewer rental properties being available.

Opposition to EPC regulations – Over half of landlords (52%) also said new rules around energy efficiency standards would be a reason for leaving the sector.  

Almost a fifth of landlords whose properties don’t meet the minimum threshold said they aren’t prepared to invest anything in upgrading their properties. 

Rising mortgage rates, increased arrears, and tax changes are also driving landlords to sell up.

Agents handling busier workloads as demand soars – 42% of agents say they simply do not have enough time to manage their workload. Alongside this, 33% of letting agents cite stress as a significant issue, and 19% report struggling with mental health challenges. Amongst agents, sentiment is at the lowest level ever recorded by this survey, with 54% feeling pessimistic about the PRS. 

Tenants competing for fewer properties – The survey also highlighted the intensifying pressures being felt by tenants as they compete for properties in a market where demand continues to outstrip supply. More than three-quarters of agents said they’d seen an increase in the number of tenants searching for properties. Almost half of agents (49.1%) described that increase as “significant”. 

Price rises put tighter squeeze on more tenants – Rents have continued to surge in 2024, with the average monthly rent in England hitting £1,470 per month in July. Only a fifth (18.5%) of landlords said they haven’t increased the rent on any of their properties over the past year. 

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