Posts with tag: tenants

How can Landlords Attract Families to Their Properties?

Published On: July 12, 2018 at 9:24 am

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Currently, in the UK’s PRS, families have outnumbered young couples, becoming the most common household type.

According to figures provided by the National Landlords Association,  (NLA), it is revealed that 48% of landlords are now letting to families. In particular, first time families have been the most frequent tenants in the rental market.

This is a stark contrast to six years ago, in 2012 when the largest group was young singletons. At this time, 53% of landlords were letting to this group.

According to Romans’ Letting Managing Director, Richard O’Neill: “Renting a home is a practical, flexible and beneficial option for thousands of families across the country. It offers a simple route for parents looking to live within a school’s catchment area or close to a support network of family and friends.

“Landlords should aim to appeal to this growing market by offering the type of homes families are demanding. Our evidence shows families are typically reliable, stable and long-term tenants – qualities that should make them highly desirable to landlords.”

Three central factors that each landlord should consider, prior to investing in a property which they are intending on letting to a family are as follows:

 

Location, Location, Location

The majority of families are seeking an area which is nearby to a reputable local school in addition to such amenities as a park, playground, leisure centres and shops. To maintain the continuity of a high rental yield, a family must feel as though these things are available to them and that a family-friendly area is guaranteed.

 

A Family Home

Prior to letting to a family, landlords should always be considering what families desire in a property. These include factors such as a spacious and well-maintained garden, two to three bedrooms with a generous amount of space and lastly, features such as parking and storage space. For tips on how to increase your rental yield, the specialist landlord insurance provider, Just Landlords has recently compiled a list of things you can do to ensure that you achieve the highest rental yield for your property.

 

Flexibility

When looking to move into a property, tenants want to feel as at home as possible – when they feel this way, the chances of them remaining in this property for a longer amount of time is far more likely. Due to this, it is advised that landlords should consider being flexible regarding permission for tenants to have pets in the house in addition to customised decoration. The most effective way to establish boundaries is through the landlord drawing up and addendum for their tenants in which they can explicitly state what they are willing to accept.

Is the Introduction of Extended Contracts Bad News for Buy-To-Let Landlords?

Published On: July 12, 2018 at 8:00 am

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According to a leading letting agent, the introduction of mandatory minimum three-year tenancies by the Government could mean that accidental landlords and small scale buy-to-let investors will be confronted with more upheaval.

The proposal of a three-year tenancy by the Government could make it increasingly difficult for buy-to-let landlords to fund their property purchases. However, Partner at Carter Jonas, Fiona Bourke asserts that extended tenancies will increase pressure in alternative ways.

Despite the objective of the plan being to provide private tenants with a high level of security, enabling them to settle down, it is Bourke’s argument that these risks may exceed the benefit of financial security for the smaller scale buy-to-let investors in addition to the accidental landlords.

She comments: ““With more rights being given to tenants, the three-year term potentially has less value to the landlord should tenants decide to leave part way through their tenancy, which they will have the freedom to do.
“Should landlords potentially come across problematic tenants it will also become harder for landlords to manage them if they are locked into a longer-term agreement.

“In my area of Wandsworth [in south London], rental agreements are often much shorter than the national four-year average and we have a significant number of local, individual and accidental landlords who may reconsider their options in light of these changes in legislation.
“Furthermore, such reconsideration could be fuelled further by the prospect of rent rise caps in future.

“Venture capitalists and asset management companies will be buying up property with the ever so slightly more safeguarded guarantee of a long-term return on investment, it [the planned new rules] could bring about a new buy-to-let audience who recognise that we’re fast becoming more of a rental society and the new laws may give landlords more stability in the long run.”

ARLA Propertymark Gives Evidence to Welsh Assembly for Tenant Fees Bill

Published On: July 10, 2018 at 10:05 am

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Further discussion about the Welsh Tenant Fees Ban has arisen, as ARLA Propertymark gave evidence to the Welsh Assembly on the Renting Homes (Fees etc) (Wales) Bill as to why the company should be exempt from certain factors.

The Welsh Tenant Fees Bill was introduced in June this year, sharing a common goal with the one currently in progress in Englandto put an end to letting fees. The first stage of the bill is now in progress, with oral evidence sessions currently taking place. The second session took place last Thursday.

Welsh Labour politician John Griffiths began the session, which was attended by David Cox, chief executive of the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) Propertymark, Charlotte Burles Corbett, managing director of Welsh estate agency Parkmans, and Isobel Thomson, chief executive of the National Approved Letting Scheme (NALS).

During the session, they discussed current fees and whether they reflect the costs incurred by letting agents.

David Cox said: “I would say they do reflect the reasonable costs that are incurred by agents. Research from within ARLA’s membership indicates that the average fee from ARLA members is about £202 per tenant. That is England and Wales; I’m afraid I don’t have Welsh-specific figures.

“Last year, we did a survey of over 1,000 agencies—1,008 to be specific—on what they actually do for the fees that they charge. It came out that, on average, it takes about eight hours to start a tenancy. It covers three main topics, which is tenant referencing, which, when thinking about it, in a sales transaction, is probably akin to a mortgage application fee; contract negotiation—translate that across to sales, that’s probably your conveyancing charges; and then the inventory, which is akin to a survey.

“If you think that, in a sales transaction, you pay three different parties, you generally pay them a lot more than £202. In a lettings transaction, you pay it to the agent that does it. The buyer pays that in the sales; the tenant pays that in in the lettings transaction.”

Isobel Thomson commented: “We accept that agency fees can be perceived as onerous additional payments, with little or no understanding from the tenant’s perspective of why they’re being charged. But we believe that the fees charged are a fair reflection of the time spent, particularly at the start of a tenancy.”

David Cox also mentioned that last year the ARLA commissioned Capital Economics, a leading market research agency, to analyse the possible economic impact of the ban. He said: “Agents are likely to pass through 75% of the costs of the loss of tenant fees on to landlords. Landlords are likely to pass on 50% of those costs to tenants, and therefore tenants are likely to see a £103 per tenant, per year rent increase as a result of this.

“…At £103 per year, that is less than the £202 on average that is charged. Therefore, tenants that move on a regular basis will see a saving as a result of this. But when we are talking about longer term tenancies, Westminster has issued a consultation only this week…when everybody is trying to encourage longer term tenancies in the private rented sector, the over-under of this policy is two and a half years, and therefore whilst encouraging longer term tenancies, this Bill is actually going to increase the costs for those people who live in longer term tenancies.”

The full progress of the Renting Homes (Fees etc.) (Wales) Bill is available to see on the National Assembly for Wales website.

Three-Year Tenancy Proposal Does Not Take into Account “Diverse and Rapidly Changing” PRS

Published On: July 10, 2018 at 9:44 am

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Benham and Reeves Residential Lettings has responded to the Government’s plan to establish three-year tenancies for private tenants as mandatory. Marc von Grundherr, Lettings Director for the company, has voiced his opinion that the proposals so far announced have not actually addressed the requirements of the UK’s “diverse and rapidly changing” Private Rented Sector (PRS).

He has stated: “There is no ‘one size fits all’ approach to regulating the PRS and we believe the Government’s proposals fail to recognise the diverse needs of tenants and landlords.

“Of course, we must protect the most vulnerable in society but, as part of a company which has operated at the heart of the lettings industry for 60 years, we understand there are many different types of tenant and therefore many different requirements.  A long-term tenancy is not suitable or indeed preferable for many of them.

“The housing market in London functions very differently to that of the rest of the country. The average London asking rental now tops £450 per week, according to Rightmove.  Most properties fitting into this bracket are studios and one-bed apartments, occupied by young professionals, ‘Generation Rent’, who want the flexibility to move regularly as their career progresses.  For them, a long-term rental is unthinkable.

“Many London properties are not the ‘family sized’ accommodation politicians are generalising about and these proposals do not suit the needs of younger professional renters in particular.

“Many corporate tenants do request the stability of a longer tenancy but require a break clause at six months. In 2017, 78% of our tenancies were for one or two years against 82% in 2016 while 22% of tenancies were for two years+ in 2017 against 18% in 2016. 71% of our tenants renewed for a second year in 2017.

“Recent tax hikes and increasing regulations mean there are already disincentives for professional property investors. For example, in London we have a growing social housing sector but, with councils now insisting rent is paid directly to the tenant and not the landlord, investors are often unwilling to rent to anyone claiming housing benefit, as it is too much hassle.

“We find landlords usually fit into one of two camps when it comes to preferred length of tenancy. Some, especially those with buy-to-let loans, are uncomfortable signing two- or three-year leases in case their circumstances change.

“Overseas investors, in particular, think about the long term, and will plan to sell at some point to realise capital growth. They are not emotional purchasers and, if letting a property no longer provides a good return, they will exit the market and look for better value in other asset classes. Longer tenancies will make this difficult.

“Landlords not dependent on a loan are more likely to agree a long-term tenancy, as it offers greater security and reduced voids. However, they risk lower rental growth and, with fewer tax incentives for buy-to-let investors, it can be hard to make the sums add up, especially for landlords paying property management fees, which vary from 6% to 8%. Clearly, it depends on rental yield. A landlord who bought their property 15 years ago will have seen significant capital growth and be cushioned against any marginal rental loss. However, an investor who bought two years ago will not be making such gains so may not be comfortable being tied into a two or three year tenancy.

“Tenants can already negotiate longer tenancies with landlords if it suits them and many landlords are happy to do this, without the need for legislation. But we fear this push to enforce longer term tenancies may be counterproductive if it leads to landlords exiting the market due to further red tape.”

Landlords Exploiting House Crisis with Sex-For-Rent Property Deals

Published On: July 10, 2018 at 8:53 am

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Now more than ever, controversial discussions surrounding sex scandals are at the height of their poignancy, and they’re not stopping when it comes to the property industry.

It has been insisted that the Government must introduce new legislation to forbid immoral practices of sex for rent deals.

Property Lawyer at Canterbury law firm Furley Page, Liz Brady, expressed her advocacy amongst the increased number of voices urging for a change in the law to put an end to deceitful landlords offering accommodation in return for sex.

Brady comments: “There have been plenty of stories in the press recently exposing the scandalous behaviour of some landlords, who are exploiting desperate and often vulnerable people seeking accommodation.

“At the moment the only action that can be taken against such landlords is a charge under the Sexual Offences Act of inciting prostitution which carries a maximum prison sentence of seven years.  This is not enforced as it is not directly applicable to the situation and relies on the victim tenant coming forward to complain.

“Many people, especially rough sleepers, the young or those trapped in abusive relationships, are unlikely to go to the police. The law clearly needs to be changed to protect the most vulnerable people in our society.”

“Agreeing to have sex with someone under the pressure and fear of homelessness, or in exchange for the basic right to have somewhere to live, does not equate to agreeing by choice.

“These shocking practices are on the rise in modern Britain which is shameful in a so-called ‘civilised society’.

“Websites like Craigslist are often used to advertise these ‘tenancies’. Advertisements promoting these morally indefensible practices should be banned and the websites responsible should be required to remove such adverts as quickly as possible.

“It is high time the government acted to change the law to deal with this abhorrent problem. It should be an offence for landlords to act in this manner or advertise such exploitative arrangements, and websites and other media should be prevented from advertising the ‘tenancies’. At the moment there seems to be a prevailing complacency about the whole scandal of sex for rent.”

Current adverts being exhibited are often deemed acceptable by the landlords who place them. These landlords allegedly argue that as long as the tenant is aware and accepting of this arrangement, there are no grounds upon which it can be perceived as immoral.

The most targeted demographic of these adverts are young women and occasionally men.

Are Letting Agents Mistreating Tenants? Consumer watchdog Which? Investigates

Published On: July 5, 2018 at 9:02 am

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With consideration of the previous story we covered this week, concerning the case of the tenant who threatened to kill his letting agent, we now investigate why tenants feel the need to retaliate in addition to how letting agents could be contributing negatively to this rage.

According to the #RentRage launched by Which?, tenants are being mistreated by their letting agents. Formulated as a hashtag on the social platform, Twitter, the purpose of #RentRage is to encourage tenants to expose and share their experiences.

The Consumer watchdog Which? undertook undercover research on 30 property viewings, spread across England and Scotland. Whilst there, they assessed the conditions of these properties in addition to asking letting agents specific questions, designed to expose whether they were providing integral information and complying with health and safety rules.

Reportedly, half of these agents were unable to provide evidence of information regarding the property’s boiler. Moreover, only 13% managed to supply the correct details concerning annual servicing rules.

Agents apparently exhibited a better comprehension of where fire alarms were located in the property, with 21 of 30 evaluated as ‘good’ and two rated ‘bad’.

Furthermore, researchers discovered that 20% of the properties visited had issues with damp, with none of the agents able to commit to rectifying the problem. Lastly, agents were also scrutinised for their explanation of holding deposits. Firms allegedly struggled to explain how much these payments would amount to and the process of how they would be refunded.

One Gentleman, interviewed by Which? shared his negative experiences with letting agents whilst searching for his perfect property.

He commented: “I’d had a look at so many flats and they were all very, very poor quality. I mean, in our price range in London, it was really difficult to find something that wasn’t a bathroom full of rust or a bedroom full of mould.

“So, when you finally find a flat that’s right, you’re just really keen. And we’re there on the day, there’s 15 other couples queuing up to look at the same time as us. So, we pressed straight ahead straight to the letting agent. He willingly accepted our money. He said ‘We just need a £500 holding deposit from you.’

“The next day, this image of our new flat came crumbling down, when the letting agent reached back out to us and said three other couples had done the same thing. They held that money over us and made us up our bids, so essentially looking for more money every month from us. Basically, holding that money, getting us into a bidding war, which, you know, is not great practise, especially when we’ve been led to believe we’d secured that flat.”

Alex Neill, Managing Director of Home Products and Services for Which? said: “There are clearly real issues with letting agents showing prospective tenants properties that aren’t up to scratch. It’s unacceptable that all too often agents can’t answer basic questions about important issues like boiler safety and carbon monoxide alarms.

“Tenants need to be given clear and accurate information before moving in to a new place and agents must do more to deliver an acceptable level of service.”