Tenant demand continues to grow

Housing Wed, Mar 23, 2016 10:39 AM

Research carried out by the largest landlord association shows tenant demand remains strong, with four in 10 landlords reporting an increase in the areas where they operate.

Findings by the National Landlords Association (NLA) found that tenant demand continues to be largely seen as either stable or increasing in the areas where they operate in the last three months, although there are variations by region.

While one in five are uncertain about demand in the areas they own property, on average 40 per cent of landlords have seen an increase.

The East of England saw the biggest net growth in tenant demand with a 48 per cent increase. This was closely followed by the South West – with 45 per cent increase – and the South East and Outer London – with 41 and 40 per cent respectively.

The research also found that on average just six percent of landlords reported a decrease in tenant demand in the last three months. Landlords in the North East reported the largest net decrease in tenant demand of all the regions with a 15 per cent decline in demand, closely followed by 12 per cent in Wales and Yorkshire and 11 per cent in the North West.

Carolyn Uphill, Chairman, NLA, said: “These figures demonstrate just how important the private rented sector is in housing a growing number of people.

“Our research indicates that five per cent of landlords will sell up following the Government’s plans to remove mortgage interest relief for landlords, which could  affect some 600,000 tenancies**.

“The Government’s planned changes, which will be phased over a period of years, gives landlords effected time to review their finances, but some will still be forced to sell or trade at a loss which is unsustainable and the projected impact will mean that ultimately renters will lose out as a dwindling stock drives up prices and competition for homes.”