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Over £9bn in housing benefit paid to landlords in the last year

Published On: August 22, 2016 at 8:57 am

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New figures have revealed that private landlords received around £9.3bn in housing benefit during the last year. This is double the amount they received ten years ago, according to research carried out by the National Housing Federation.

In 2006, some £4.6bn was paid to private landlords in housing benefit. With this figure more than doubling in the last decade, these figures underline the substantial number of private tenants claiming financial help.

Concerns

Findings from the report have raised new concerns about the Government’s policy on moving housing benefit recipients into the private rental sector. The National Housing Federation report suggests that taxpayers could have saved around £15.6bn during the past seven years, if housing benefit tenants had lived in social housing instead of the private rental sector.

Chief executive of the National Housing Federation David Orr said that it is, ‘madness’ that £9bn of taxpayers’ money is, ‘lining the pockets of private landlords rather than investing in affordable homes.’[1]

‘The lack of affordable housing available means that a wider group of people need housing benefit,’ he added.[1]

Over £9bn in housing benefit paid to landlords in the last year

Over £9bn in housing benefit paid to landlords in the last year

Defence

Giving his response to the findings, Richard Lambert, chief executive of the National Landlords Association, moved to defend landlord letting to benefit tenants.

Lambert said, ‘housing benefit is not a subsidy to landlords; it’s a support for tenants to ensure they can pay for their housing. However, the proportion of landlords who let to tenants in receipt of housing benefit has halved over the last five years as benefit levels have not kept up with rents.’[1]

‘The National Housing Federation is clearly still reeling from the news that its member have been ordered by Government to reduce spending over the next four years, so it comes as no surprise that they are looking to shift the emphasis and point the finger elsewhere,’ Lambert continued.[1]

Growth

Mr Lambert went on to say that the private rental sector has actually grown, with the market responding to increased demand for homes. He feels there are a growing number of tenants who are simply not supported by the social sector or housing associations.

‘The private rented sector plays a significant role in providing much-needed homes for tenants so there seems no real benefit in the National Housing Federation taking a cheap shot at landlords. What we should all be talking about is the failure of successive government’s to adequately allocate its housing budget and to incentivise the building of new homes. In the long term, that would be the best use of taxpayers’ money,’ Lambert concluded.[1]

[1] https://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/8/more-than-9bn-in-housing-benefits-paid-to-private-landlords-last-year

House Prices Will Fall by 1% in 2017, Predicts Countrywide

Published On: August 22, 2016 at 8:50 am

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House prices are expected to fall by 1% in 2017, according to the latest predictions from property firm Countrywide.

Today’s report also forecasts that house price growth will slow to 2.5% across the UK this year, but will recover to 2% in 2018, following next year’s decline.

Countrywide believes that house price growth will slow across all regions of the UK in 2016 and 2017, with recovery expected to begin at the end of next year and into 2018.

London is expected to see price growth slow to 3.5% this year, ahead of a 1.25% decrease in 2017 and a recovery to 2% in 2018. The firm predicts that prime central London will be the hardest hit, with price growth forecast to fall by 6% in 2016, rising to 0% in 2017 and 4% in 2018.

Across the south and East of England, price growth is also expected to slow in 2016, followed by small declines in 2017, before returning to positive growth in 2018.

Price growth in the South East will ease to 3.5% in 2016, down from 9.6% in 2015 and fall to -1% in 2017, according to Countrywide. The firm forecasts a similar path for house prices in the East and South West, as prices adjust to weaker economic conditions and previous strong growth.

House Prices Will Fall by 1% in 2017, Predicts Countrywide

House Prices Will Fall by 1% in 2017, Predicts Countrywide

Weaker economic conditions are also expected to hit prices in the north, Midlands and Wales.

Countrywide predicts that price growth will drop to 0.5% in 2016 and -0.25% in 2017 in the North East. Price growth in the North West, Yorkshire and the Humber, Wales and the Midlands is also expected to slow over 2016. Next year is also likely to see small declines too, as uncertainty surrounding the EU referendum impacts investment and labour markets, despite the support of a weaker currency.

The vote to leave the EU has unsettled the UK economy, Countrywide reports, as uncertainty surrounding the arrangements for Brexit affect trade and future economic growth.

The firm forecasts a weaker economy, which will hit house prices and property sales through consumer confidence, household incomes and the labour market.

Although this is not the only factor affecting the path of house prices, it says. Higher Stamp Duty rates are continuing to take their toll on the top end of the market, and after years of double-digit house price growth, expectations of future capital gains have weakened in many areas, leading to reduced demand.

However, the report adds that the continuing lack of housing supply and very low mortgage rates will remain a supportive factor for house prices. Putting its predictions into context, Countrywide expects prices to return to levels seen in the first quarter of this year.

Nevertheless, it points out that there are higher than usual risks at this time, given the nature of the challenges facing the country. The firm says that future house price growth will be dominated by the UK’s negotiations with the EU. It believes an orderly exit is in the interest of the remaining EU members and global economies – this gives some room for an upturn to the forecasts.

The Chief Economist at Countrywide, Fionnuala Earley, comments: “Forecasts in the current environment are trickier than ever, as the vote to leave the EU has thrown up many risks. Our central view is that the economy will avoid a hard landing, which is good news for housing markets. However, the weaker prospects for confidence, household incomes and the labour market mean that we do expect some modest falls in house prices, before they return to positive growth towards the end of 2017 and into 2018.

“Not all of the corrections are due to the vote to leave the EU. Stamp Duty and weaker house price growth expectations, particularly in London’s prime markets, have a part to play. There are supports to prices on the supply side from the continuing mismatch of supply. On the demand side, ultra low interest rates and the significant discounts available to overseas buyers, resulting from the fall in sterling, will help to support prices too.”

 

Landlord Rules You Must Not Break

With new landlord laws being introduced every few months, it’s easy for landlords to forget or overlook some of the legal requirements. So here are some of the most important rules and tips on how to avoid accidentally breaking them.

Have an annual gas safety check – This is top of the list, not only because it’s a legal requirement but, more importantly, it could save your tenants’ lives. Every gas burning appliance, including boilers and hobs, must be checked at least once a year by a Gas Safe-registered engineer and any faults repaired before the appliance is used again.

If you don’t, you are potentially risking your tenants’ lives and a fine of up to £20,000. Repeat offenders, or those who are found to have endangered their tenants, could be given a prison sentence. Also, landlords who haven’t got a valid gas safety record can’t evict their tenants.

How to avoid breaking the law – Tie a knot in a hanky as a reminder, or, better still, sign up to gassaferegister.co.uk for an email reminder when your annual check is due. The website also provides contact details for registered engineers.

The gas engineer will issue you with two copies of the Gas Safety Record: one for you and one for the tenant. You must keep your copy for two years and the other must be shown to existing tenants within 28 days of the check. New tenants must be given a copy when they move in.

Install smoke alarms – These became mandatory in rental properties from October 2015. Since then, it has been a legal requirement to have at least one working smoke alarm on every floor of a rental property. Landlords with solid fuel burning appliances must also install carbon monoxide alarms.

If you don’t, there’s a greater risk of your tenant being injured in the event of a fire or a carbon monoxide leak, and you face a fine of up to £5,000.

How to avoid breaking the law – Check alarms are working at the start of each tenancy and have this noted on the inventory. Also, you should insert a clause into the tenancy agreement to state that it’s the tenant’s responsibility to ensure the alarms are kept clear of dust and to replace spent batteries.

Landlord Rules You Must Not Break

Landlord Rules You Must Not Break

Protect your tenant’s deposit – You need to register the deposit with one of three Government-approved schemes, which is pretty straightforward. However, many landlords don’t realise that you must also give the tenant specific information about where and how their deposit is protected, plus information on what they must do to get a refund at the end of their tenancy. You must also cite the reasons why they might forfeit some or all of their deposit.

If you don’t, your tenant could take you to court and you might be ordered to compensate them up to three times the value of the deposit. Also, you can’t issue a section 21 notice to end a tenancy unless you have correctly protected the deposit, including issuing the tenant with the prescribed information. 

How to avoid breaking the law- Make sure you download the prescribed information forms from the scheme’s website, fill these in (carefully) and send them to your tenant.  Make sure you have double-checked that all the information is correct, because if there is an error, you could still be prosecuted.

Ask your tenants to sign a form to say they have received all the information and keep copies for your own records.

Check your tenant’s Right to Rent – Immigration checks on tenants have been obligatory for landlords since February 2016. This means you must check that every tenant has the right to live in the UK before granting them a tenancy.

If you don’t, you could be fined up to £3,000, and repeat offenders face the prospect of a prison sentence.

How to avoid breaking the law – You must check the right to rent of every adult who will be living in the property, even if they are not named on the tenancy agreement and even if they appear to be British or a member of another European Union state.

You should check their photo ID and, if they’re not a British, EU or Swiss citizen, you will need to check that they have a valid visa, a certificate or a permit to remain in the UK. A list of acceptable ID is available from the Home Office.

The law requires you to check the ID in the tenant’s presence and to take a copy, which you must keep for a year after the end of the tenancy. Visas must be checked within 28 days of the start of the tenancy.

In order to comply with Data Protection Laws, you must keep the ID safe and tell the tenant if you need to send it to the Home Office for verification.

Further information, including how to verify a visa, is available from the Home Office.

End a tenancy the right way – This is no longer as easy as writing a note to a tenant to tell them you’d like them to leave. You must issue what’s known as a section 21 notice (or section 8 if the tenant has done something wrong and they’re still within the fixed period of their tenancy agreement). You must issue a section 21, even if the contract is due to expire, otherwise the tenant is entitled to stay.

If you don’t, the tenant has the legal right to stay living in your property until notice is correctly served.

How to avoid breaking the law – Remember, you can’t issue a section 21 during the first four months of a tenancy – you must give the tenant at least two months’ notice (allowing three to four days for the notice to arrive if you are sending it by post) and the notice period can’t expire during the fixed period of the tenancy agreement.

Also, you can only serve a section 21 notice if you have given the tenant a valid Gas Safety Record, an EPC for the property, a copy of the Government-issued How to Rent guide and you have protected their deposit.

If you’d like to know more about the new landlord regulations, Upad and Direct Line for Business are running a free webinar Thursday 1st September at 7.30pm – Register here.

Partnership between online auctioneer and mortgage lender revealed

Published On: August 19, 2016 at 11:16 am

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Today has seen an industry-first partnership between an online auction house and a mortgage lender.

Short-term property finance lender LendInvest has become the funding partner for online auction house LOT11.

Partnership

This partnership will see LendInvest pre-qualify selected lots at LOT11 auctions which come within the lenders’ criteria. In addition the lender’s logo will appear next to any auction property that has been pre-qualified by them. This will allow buyers to see at a glance which properties the lenders is prepared to loan against.

On the information page of each property, funding details will be present, as will other key information. This will include floor plans to legal documents.

Matthew Tooth, Head of Distribution at LendInvest, said, ‘this exciting partnership reflects the growing importance of auction finance to LendInvest. Both LendInvest and LOT11 are challenging the status quo in our respective fields with the application of sensible technology, so we make perfect partners. This service will help prospective buyers and their brokers move quickly to secure properties that catch their eye.’[1]

Partnership between online auctioneer and mortgage lender revealed

Partnership between online auctioneer and mortgage lender revealed

Service

Kevin Coughter, CEO of LOT11, added, ‘LendInvest has established itself as a lender which offers a speedy, efficient and flexible service for buyers and sellers who need to move quickly. LOT11 clients are accustomed to achieving fast results and having all of the information they need at their fingertips; this partnership will only enhance their journey with us.’[1]

The partnership will officially begin at LOT11’s next quarterly auction on the 27th September.

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/business/industry-first-partnership-between-online-auction-house-and-lender-announced.html

Councillor Calls for Further Landlord Licensing Scheme in Bristol

Published On: August 19, 2016 at 10:51 am

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A councillor has called for a further landlord licensing scheme in Bristol, as she believes many people in the city are living in poor conditions.

Councillor Carla Denyer, of the Clifton Down ward, believes that a wider licensing scheme would help combat serious rental property hazards in the city, even in affluent areas such as Clifton.

Bristol’s first landlord licensing scheme was introduced in one designated area of Easton last year. It required all private landlords in the area to register with the council and agree to keep their properties in a good condition, as well as allow inspections.

Denyer reports that the scheme has successfully improved 700 private rental properties in the area, as well as resolved 199 serious hazards.

Councillor Calls for Further Landlord Licensing Scheme in Bristol

Councillor Calls for Further Landlord Licensing Scheme in Bristol

Earlier this month, the first successful prosecution under the scheme was led by the council, which prosecuted a couple for not obtaining licenses and for not providing housing officers with documentation covering house safety.

The couple, Jagtar and Jagdish Kandola, was ordered to pay more than £38,000 in fines and costs, in a case that they failed to turn up to.

Now, Denyer has joined community housing group Acorn and Bristol’s student union housing representative to call for the scheme to be introduced across the city, particularly in areas with a high student or private tenant population.

A second scheme is currently underway in Eastville and St George, with private landlords having until the end of September to register or face prosecution.

Denyer says: “We want the council to extend landlord licensing to make sure landlords provide minimum standards in other problem areas of the city.

“People may think of Clifton Down as a privileged area, but behind the grand front doors, there are many untold stories of damp, mould and dangerous living conditions. I have met people who pay extortionate rent, yet have daily battles to get their landlord to fix a broken toilet or mend a leaking roof.”

She adds: “We are now calling on the mayor to look at extending the scheme to other areas of the city, following consultation with local communities.”

Acorn has also been campaigning for ethical lettings in Bristol. Its spokesperson, Nick Ballard, believes the licensing scheme us “vital”.

He explains: “Like any business, private rentals must be properly regulated and decent standards ensured.

“Landlord licensing is a vital first step in creating a register of landlords that will allow much-needed oversight. Permitting local authorities to inspect privately rented property as a matter of course will protect tenants from the revenge evictions that too often follow when we complain ourselves. Acorn is committed to the creation of a progressive and fair rental sector, and landlord licensing is a fundamental requirement for this.”

Students will hugely benefit from landlord licensing, claims Stephen Le Fanu, the Student Living Officer from Bristol Students’ Union, who is also a member of the Acorn student group at the University of Bristol.

“Our recent student housing survey showed that both University of Bristol and University of West of England students are frequently having to live in poor conditions and are charged rip-off fees,” he says.

“This is simply not acceptable. We have formed a group of students from across the city to tackle together some of the problems that students are individually facing and want to invite all those interested to get involved.”

Landlords, what do you think about the new proposals?

Campaigners against tax changes to have case heard next month

Published On: August 19, 2016 at 10:25 am

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A legal campaign to overturn the UK Government’s decision to alter mortgage interest tax relief that residential landlords can claim will be heard next month.

At the end of September, there will be a hearing to determine whether of not there will be a judicial review of the move to reduce tax relief from 2017to 2020.

Challenge

Both landlords and organisations have warned that the move could put off existing buy-to-let landlords coming into the sector. In addition, it could hit existing landlords, who could be left with little choice but to pass on this additional costs to their tenants, in the shape of higher rents.

Campaigners Steve Bolton and Chris Cooper said that they will meet with new housing minister Gavin Barwell on the 9th September, when the issue will be discussed further.

In a statement, the two campaigners said, ‘we will obviously be raising our serious concerns about the impact, making him aware of our legal challenge and doing the best job we can to help him become a supporter of our cause within Government.’[1]

Costly

The Scottish Association of Landlords and the Residential Landlords Association have both warned that these tax changes will make it easier for rogue landlords to provide sub-standard houses to tenants, due to increased costs.

Recently, a recent YouGov survey for the Council of Mortgage lenders suggested that 34% of landlords plan to reduce their investment in the sector as a direct result of the changes.

John Blackwood, of the Scottish Association of Landlords, said, ‘we know from our regular branch meetings around Scotland that landlords are already seeing increased costs as a result of tax changes. As well as impacting on individual landlords, we are concerned this could make it harder to tackle the current housing crisis by making it more difficult to attract much needed investment.’[1]

‘With the uncertain investment environment that has been created by the Brexit vote, at least in the short term, the last thing anyone in the housing sector needs is tax rises which will only make things worse,’ he continued.[1]

‘Furthermore, we are concerned that if costs increase, this could open the door for rogue landlords who don’t follow the rules on either tax or safety and quality standards at a time when real progress is being made at driving these unscrupulous players out of the market.’[1]

Campaigners against tax changes to have case heard next month

Campaigners against tax changes to have case heard next month

Restrictions

Lettings group Belvoir also said that the changes are likely to deter landlords from making further investment, which in turn will restrict the supply of available properties.

Managing director of Belvoir, Dorian Gonsalves, said, ‘Gavin Barwell, the new Housing Minister, takes swift action to unpick the disastrous tax policies that were introduced by the previous Chancellor George Osborne. We believe that the government should be taking steps to incentivise private landlords to invest in Buy to Let properties, as this is what will bring rents down.’[1]

‘If the government wants to make housing more affordable the only way to do this is to increase the supply of properties on the market. It is completely counter intuitive to restrict supply with tax changes and then not expect rents to rise. Gavin Barwell has an opportunity reverse the situation and create an environment where there is an oversupply of rental properties. This can only be achieved by incentivising landlords and making the rental market more affordable for tenants,’ he concluded.[1]

[1] http://www.propertywire.com/news/europe/uk-buy-let-tax-2016081912280.html