Posts with tag: private rental sector

Online Rental Fraud Rising in England and Wales

Published On: January 26, 2016 at 12:53 pm

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Online rental fraud is surging in the capital, according to a report from the BBC.

Last night’s Inside Out London show found that there were 3,193 cases of alleged rental fraud reported to Action Fraud in England and Wales last year, up from 2,216 in 2014.

Online Rental Fraud Rising in England and Wales

Online Rental Fraud Rising in England and Wales

The fraudsters offer rental properties that they do not own to tenants and then take deposits.

Researchers at the BBC posed as prospective tenants with the help from portal EasyRoommate. They contacted advertisers whose advertisements had been blocked by the website.

One scammer, calling themselves Louise, advertised a luxurious apartment in Kensington for £700 per month – well below the market rate.

Louise tried to convince the researcher into wiring £1,400 to a branch of the Coventry Building Society in order to secure the property.

She then emailed both a rental contract and a passport image of a German lady.

Land Registry data confirmed that Louise was not the legal owner of the flat and that all the apartments in the block were already occupied.

The real owners of the property said that Louise had no association with the apartment.

The BBC found that the fraudster is based in this country and had stolen the identity of a real German lady.

A second scammer offered a flat in Willesden at below the average price for the area and insisted the researcher wire £1,500 to a Halifax account.

The property’s managing agent knew nothing of the fraudster and the flat was already occupied.

Additionally, the fraudster claimed to be based in London, but was in fact using a computer in Nigeria.

EasyRoommate had also blocked this advertisement. The portal blocks 5% of adverts each week, as they are suspected to be fraudulent. A further 1.5% are taken down after publication.

Watch the full episode from last night here: http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b06yr98n/inside-out-london-25012016

Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

Published On: January 26, 2016 at 9:28 am

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Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

Average Asking Price to Surpass £300k by End of Year

The average asking price of new properties for sale will be £307,000 by the end of this year, according to predictions from Rightmove.

The property portal expects asking prices to increase by an average of £17,000 over the next 12 months.

It forecasts that the average new asking price in London will rise by 3% over 2016, to £635,000.

Rightmove’s January House Price Index found that the average price of property coming onto the market is up by 0.5% (£1,509) on December – the second highest Christmas/New Year period increase since 2007.

The average asking price of a new home coming onto the market is currently £290,963 across the UK and £610,741 in London.

The portal also predicts a surge in traffic to its website in the spring, as rental demand will continue to grow as house prices rise further. In the first week of 2016, visits to Rightmove rose by 21% compared to the same period in 2015.

The expectations arrive after the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) reported a lull in rental supply and demand for December. This seasonal slowdown is normal. However, letting agents fear that the forthcoming changes to Stamp Duty for buy-to-let investors could cause private landlords to leave the sector and thus, lower supply further.

Find out more about the changes and what they could mean for the private rental sector here: /17794-2/

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

Published On: January 25, 2016 at 1:07 pm

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Last week, the Housing Minister, Brandon Lewis, announced a £5m fund to help local authorities tackle rogue landlords. However, the body that represents councils believes that the funding will not work if the current legal system is not updated.

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

£5m Rogue Landlord Fund Will Not Work if Legal System is Not Updated

The fund will be split between 48 councils in England. It is aimed at eradicating “the cowboy operators in their area and bring an end to tenants living in miserable homes in the name of profit”. Find out if your council will receive a share here: /5m/

The new fund is part of the proposed Housing and Planning Bill, which also looks to introduce banning orders for persistent rogue landlords and letting agents.

The Local Government Association (LGA) has responded, saying that the system for prosecuting rogue landlords must be modernised.

The spokesperson for the LGA, Peter Box, states: “The private rented sector is growing and, with limited resources and competing funding pressures, councils are working hard to ensure that rogue landlords are dealt with robustly and effectively.

“However, they are too often being hamstrung by an outdated system. It can take more than a year to prosecute a rogue operator and in many cases, paltry fines are handed out to criminal landlords.”

He continues: “Proposals in the Housing and Planning Bill for banning orders for the worst operators in the private rented sector will help councils tackle this issue, as will the flexibility to issue fines to private landlords as an alternative to prosecutions.

“We will be working with the Government to ensure measures in the bill are properly resourced so councils can make full use of them.

“Our chronic housing crisis is making it easier for bad landlords to exploit tenants.”

He adds: “Councils must be given a lead role in building new affordable rented homes so that people who can’t afford to buy are not forced into the more expensive private rented sector.”1

1 http://www.local.gov.uk/media-releases/-/journal_content/56/10180/7657355/NEWS

 

 

 

The Hidden Costs of Renting

Published On: January 25, 2016 at 9:48 am

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Shocking new details of charges within the lettings industry have recently emerged, indicating that tenants are increasingly being faced with hidden costs.

Some renters in London are being charged £10 whenever they have a friend to stay, while others report that they are being asked to pay whenever they cook or wash their clothes. In some cases, prospective tenants are being charged over £100 just to see a list of properties.

Letting agents are not permitted to charge tenants for registering or seeing a list of properties if they also charge the landlord. However, firms such as EasyLets UK, Spacelet or Flatland, which are relocation or appointment-making agents, find their way around the rule.

The Hidden Costs of Renting

The Hidden Costs of Renting

Instead of receiving payment from the landlords whose properties they market, they charge potential renters upfront fees. It now appears that landlords too are adding on more costs.

Gloria Orphanidou, a graduate from Cyprus, has been trying to find a room to rent in the capital since December that is within her £500 per month budget. She paid West End agent EasyLets £110 to find a property after seeing potential homes listed by the agent on Rightmove.

She was told that bills were included in the advertised rent prices, but when she approached the landlords of these properties, one informed her that she would be charged a fee every time she cooked or did laundry.

She adds: “The other two were properties living with landlords, where I was not allowed to have any visitors unless I paid them £10 every time someone came to see me.”

These strategies appear to have become commonplace in a market that is as competitive as ever and is becoming increasingly expensive.

The latest data on the private rental sector, from Your Move and Reeds Rains, shows that rent prices in England and Wales rose by an average of 3.4% in 2015, taking the cost of renting in some regions to record highs.

The greatest increase over the last year was in the East of England, where rents grew by 7.8% to an average of £831 a month. Meanwhile, the 6.3% rise in London took the average to £1,251.

Demand for private rental accommodation has been fuelled by the number of hopeful first time buyers struggling to get onto the property ladder. In prime central London, estate agents have reported an increase in the amount of wealthy households looking to rent rather than buy, due to Stamp Duty rises.

Over the weekend, we uncovered a flat that was named the cheapest in London. It was sold for £79,000 despite being just 75 square feet. Take a look: /is-this-the-cheapest-flat-in-london/

Orphanidou complained to EasyLets that the homes she was shown were inappropriate, but the company refused to refund the £110 fee.

“I felt so stupid and angry at myself,” she comments. “I am broke enough as it is, with just enough money to pay rent for a cheap room, and I had wasted £110 on an agent who clearly doesn’t care and won’t help me find a house.”1 

The Observer inquired into the case, to which EasyLets forwarded 16 text messages from satisfied clients who had found a room through the agent.

The Director of EasyLets UK, David Funaro, told the Observer: “Please mention in your article the few people who text me and thank me for my help. I did find a place for Gloria with permission to have her boyfriend over on the weekend and pay £10 for the night he would stay to the landlord and she even liked the room.”1

Giles Peaker, a housing lawyer at Anthony Gold Solicitors, called the £10 fee “dreadful”1 and says the contract term could be deemed unfair and therefore unenforceable.

The Policy Officer at Generation Rent, Dan Wilson Craw, adds: “Paying an upfront fee before seeing a single property, let alone agreeing a tenancy, is full of risk. To learn that you might then be asked to pay extra for everyday behaviour like having a partner stay over or cooking a meal is shocking.”1 

Have you faced any similar charges yourself? Or perhaps you’ve imposed fees like this to your tenants? Either way, do you agree with the costs?

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2016/jan/23/hidden-costs-facing-generation-rent

Two London Landlords Fined for Ignoring Council Notices

Published On: January 20, 2016 at 12:39 pm

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Two rogue landlords in Southall, west London, have been found guilty of failing to comply with council notices and orders to make their substandard rental properties safe.

Ealing Borough Council prosecuted Ahdil Saddiq – also known as Mohammed Jameel Choudhry and Jameel M Choudhry – and Jasjeet Singh Punny.

Two London Landlords Fined for Ignoring Council Notices

Two London Landlords Fined for Ignoring Council Notices

Saddiq was prosecuted for failing to comply with a prohibition order and demolition order served by the council’s House in Multiple Occupation (HMO) team, due to a damp, dangerous and illegal outhouse at the rear of 5 Heathway, The Common, Southall.

When council officers inspected the outhouse in 2012, they discovered mould, damp and cold conditions, and several electrical and fire safety hazards.

In October 2012, a prohibition order was issued forbidding anyone to live or sleep there. However, subsequent inspections found that the landlord had ignored the order, and the outhouse was still occupied.

In January 2014, the council served a demolition order, requiring the outhouse to be destroyed. Saddiq also ignored this notice, leading to the council stepping in and demolishing the outhouse.

Saddiq must now pay the council’s demolition costs of around £18,000, or a charge will be placed against the property.

On 7th January, Saddiq appeared at Ealing Magistrates’ Court and was found guilty of six charges regarding the failure to comply with the prohibition and demolition orders. He was ordered to pay a £560 fine and the council’s legal costs of £2,616, alongside the £18,000 demolition costs.

Separately, Punny was prosecuted for failing to comply with an improvement notice served on his property at 12 Oakleigh Court, Southall.

Punny was renting the property out to a mother and her young, asthmatic child. When officers inspected the home, they found mould covering the walls, a large sliding door not fixed to the wall, so at risk of falling, and kitchen cabinets also not secured properly to the wall.

In September 2014, the council served an improvement notice, ordering Punny to make improvements. However, he ignored all attempts by the officers to contact him.

He failed to make the property safe, and therefore appeared before Ealing Magistrates’ Court on 7th January where he was found guilty of failing to comply with the notice. He was issued a fine and ordered to pay council costs totalling £4,964.

Councillor Ranjit Dheer, the Cabinet Member for Safety, Culture and Community Services at Ealing Borough Council, insists: “There is no place in this borough for slum landlords who are willing to put their tenants’ health and safety at risk for pure profit.

“Ealing Council is working hard to make sure that dangerous landlords feel the full weight of our powers and I am delighted to see these two selfish and irresponsible individuals found guilty.”1

1 http://www.ealing.gov.uk/news/article/1428/ealing_council_brings_rogue_landlords_to_justice

The West of England Rental Standard has Launched

Four county authorities have launched a scheme for accrediting landlords and letting agents in the west of England.

The West of England Rental Standard encompasses Bristol City, North Somerset, Bath and North East Somerset, and South Gloucestershire councils.

The West of England Rental Standard has Launched

The West of England Rental Standard has Launched

The scheme officially launched on 5th January. It was created to provide a single mark of accreditation for landlords and agents in South Gloucestershire and the west of England.

Organisations that accredit landlords and agents are being encouraged to apply to be endorsed accreditation providers, if their schemes meet the standard.

The West of England Rental Standard sets out specific key criteria for rental properties and encourages landlords to do more than simply meet legal requirements.

It details a minimum standard that landlords and letting or management agents must reach and creates a kite mark, so that tenants can be sure that their property and landlord meet the standard.

The standard aims to become the single accreditation scheme for compliant landlords and agents within the region, and hopes to help tenants find good quality homes.

Councillor Ben Stokes, Adults and Housing Committee Chair at South Gloucestershire Council, comments: “South Gloucestershire has approximately 14,600 privately rented properties, and schemes such as the West of England Rental Standard will help to protect tenants by promoting good landlords and exposing the poor ones.

“We want to work with and support accrediting bodies, landlords and letting agents to provide tenants with good quality rental accommodation for our residents.”1

The rental standard is a voluntary scheme and does not replace the enforcement methods available to councils to make sure that landlords comply with legal requirements.

For an initial period of three years, Bristol City Council will administer the scheme on behalf of the four county authorities.

Organisations that operate in South Gloucestershire and the west of England are invited to complete an application form and return this with an application fee by 12th February 2016.

Successful organisations will be announced in March, alongside a publicity campaign.

More information about the standard and how to apply can be found here: www.westofenglandrentalstandard.co.uk

1 http://www.southglos.gov.uk/news/west-of-england-rental-standard-launches/