Posts with tag: renting in Europe

Where in Europe Costs the Most to Rent?

Published On: July 7, 2015 at 10:04 am

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The average private renter in the UK pays over double the EU average for their home, revealed new maps published by the National Housing Federation (NHF).

Based on EU figures for 2013 – the last year that figures are available for the whole continent – the maps reveal the cost of renting in different European countries. The first details the cost in absolute terms and the second as a proportion of the average wage.

Looking at countries as a whole can hide the huge differences between regions, but the results do provide a shocking insight into Europe’s private rental market.

The first map details the absolute cost of private rents. The UK average of €902 (£640) per month is the highest by a long way. In second place is Ireland, with a rental cost of €679 (£482). However, this is still significantly less than the cost the typical renter in the UK pays.

The next collection of high-rent countries include the Netherlands, Denmark, Spain and Belgium, all slightly over €600 (£426) per month. The lowest monthly rents are found in Latvia at only €186 (£132).

The wide gap between UK rents and rents elsewhere is striking. However, the second map gives a better picture of actual affordability. This one indicates how much of EU residents’ monthly income is spent on rent.

The UK is still the most expensive, but it now shares this position with Spain.

Renters in both countries spend an average 39% of their income on rent. Between the top and second position is a slight 4%. Sweden and Romania follow, where private renting households spend 35% of their wages on rent.

Latvia is still fairly cheap, with renters spending just 15% of their earnings on their home. However, Slovakia is cheaper still, at 13%.

In Western Europe, Germany and Portugal have the best ratio of rental cost to income, with households in both countries spending a quarter of their wages on rent.

The UK result is not shocking, considering the housing crisis across most of the country, especially in London. The capital is now subject to many international property investors, with residents believing homes are being built for the benefit of investors alone.

But this problem is spreading to other UK regions. Housing demand is substantially outstripping supply, even in areas that have previously been bubble-free, such as Scotland.

In some regions, newly signed rental contracts are as cheap as £560 (€788). However, new laws mean that pension-holders may now gain access to their whole pension fund, and therefore property investment is set to grow.

This puts considerable strain on renters. NHF researcher, Gerald Koessl, says: “Individuals and families [in the UK] have to spend the equivalent of around 23 minutes out of every hour worked to pay for their rent, while it is around 17 minutes of every hour worked across the whole of Europe.”1 

Spain’s high rent costs, however, are more surprising. The country is still struggling to recover from its post-2008 economic crisis. A general lack of available cash should have pushed prices down. In fact, yields for Spanish rental properties have doubled in the past five years.

This could be due to the fact that Spain was a nation of owner-occupiers before the crisis. When the Spanish housing bubble burst, residents found it harder to secure financing due to falling wages and a recession. For those able to buy, wariness stopped them doing so.

This is understandable, considering the huge problem that Spain is facing regarding evictions. This has become so serious that Amnesty International is now campaigning against it. More tenants are chasing available properties and renters are seeing rent costs increase, despite their wages remaining static or even dropping.

It is unsurprising that both Madrid and Barcelona have now elected mayors with a history of campaigning for affordable housing and against evictions. Spaniards should not feel alone, however, as the maps indicate that fellow Europeans are not that much better off.

1 http://www.citylab.com/housing/2015/06/where-europeans-spend-the-most-on-rent-mapped/396833/

 

Renting in UK is More Expensive than Anywhere Else in Europe

Published On: July 1, 2015 at 12:51 pm

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Renting in UK is More Expensive than Anywhere Else in Europe

Renting in UK is More Expensive than Anywhere Else in Europe

Private tenants in the UK are paying higher rents than anywhere else in Europe, spending a larger proportion of the average wage on accommodation, revealed research by the National Housing Federation (NHF).

The average UK rent is £750 (€902) per month. The European average is just £400 (€481) a month, found the NHF, which represents housing associations.

Renting privately in the UK costs around 40% of a tenant’s income, comparing to the average of 28% in Europe.

Renters in Spain are the only ones that are close to the UK average, with their typical rent of €622 a month accounting for 39% of their income. In Germany, the average monthly rent of €600 is just 25% of the average wage.

Chief Executive of the NHF, David Orr, comments: “Not only do British renters face crippling rents, but they have almost no certainty about whether they will be able to stay in their home from one year to the next.”1

The average UK rent vs. European averages

Country

% of income spent on rent

Average monthly rent

UK 39.1 €902
Switzerland 31.9 €922
Spain 39 €622
The Netherlands 28.5 €625
Germany 24.8 €600
France 29.5 €598
Sweden 34.8 €500
Malta 29 €461
Romania 34.7 €333
Slovakia 13.2 €239

Chief Executive of the NHF, David Orr, comments: “Not only do British renters face crippling rents, but they have almost no certainty about whether they will be able to stay in their home from one year to the next.”1

Short-term tenancies in the UK mean that 77% of renters in Great Britain and Northern Ireland moved house in the last five years, compared to 43% across Europe.

This data arrives after the Halifax revealed growing numbers of aspiring first time buyers are moving back in with their parents, despite record low mortgage rates and a rising availability of mortgages for those with low deposits.

The Halifax, who surveyed 1,000 parents of 20-45-year olds, found that 28% have taken their children back into the family home, compared with 24% in 2012.

However, super low mortgage rates are enabling thousands of buyers to purchase a home, if they can save a large deposit. Research released from the British Bankers’ Association (BBA) revealed that the amount of people who were granted a new mortgage in May increased to the highest level since March 2014.

On the BBA figures, Richard Sexton, Director of chartered surveyors e.surv, says: “Borrowers finally have more money in their pockets as inflation remains limited and wages are experiencing a tangible rise. Meanwhile, lenders continue to offer an increasing number of products to borrowers with smaller deposits, at record low rates.”1

However, the NHF also found that increasing property prices mean that two thirds of first time buyers are dependent on financial help from their parents for buying their first home.

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/jun/24/uk-tenants-pay-more-rent-than-europe