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Letting Agency Fined £8,000 for HMO Breach

Letting Agency Fined £8,000 for HMO Breach

Letting Agency Fined £8,000 for HMO Breach

A letting agency in Oxford has been ordered to pay fines totalling £7,000 and costs of £1,140 after the City Council took it to court over an unlicensed and unsafe House in Multiple Occupation (HMO).

The Letting Centre Oxford Ltd., based in the suburb of Headington, was prosecuted after environmental health officers discovered that it was managing an HMO that was unlicensed and did not comply with fire safety regulations.

Officers from Oxford City Council inspected the property in November 2014, which confirmed suspicions that it was unlicensed and unsafe. The house had a missing fire door and locks that would stop occupants escaping in the event of a fire.

Director of The Letting Centre Oxford Ltd., Darren Hazell, pleaded guilty to being in control of an unlicensed HMO and was handed a fine of £5,000 for failing to obtain a license. He also admitted to one breach of the Management of Houses in Multiple Occupation (England) Regulations 2006 and received a fine of £2,000.

Additionally, the court ordered the agency to pay the Council’s full costs of £1,140 for bringing the case to court.

An Oxford City Council spokesperson says: “The City Council requires all HMOs to be licensed in order to raise standards in properties as well as their management. We will take action against landlords who fail to comply with legal requirements to license and maintain HMOs to acceptable standards.”1

1 https://www.lettingagenttoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2015/6/letting-agency-must-pay-over-8-000-after-hmo-breach

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Enter the Great Property Bike Ride Now

Published On: July 1, 2015 at 8:51 am

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Categories: Landlord News

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Enter the Great Property Bike Ride Now

Enter the Great Property Bike Ride Now

The Great Property Bike Ride is taking place this year on Thursday 30th July in Dorking, Surrey.

The event is in aid of homelessness charity Shelter and commercial property consultants CBRE, aiming to make a better future for housing in the UK.

The ride offers three routes around the beautiful Surrey Hills and includes challenging terrain for all levels of sportive riders.

The venue, Denbies, lies near Boxhill and is close to main transport links.

The three routes all cost £60 each if you book online. The Epic course is 61 miles, the Standard is 30 and the Short is 14, all running along the zigzags of the Olympic road course.

Find out more and enter here: http://www.ukcyclingevents.co.uk/events/cbre-the-great-property-bike-ride/

Ombudsman Services Rejects 80% of Initial Complaints

Ombudsman Services has revealed that 81% of initial complaints against estate and letting agents are rejected.

Ombudsman Services Rejects 80% of Initial Complaints

Ombudsman Services Rejects 80% of Initial Complaints

Of the 5,265 initial inquiries last year, just 19% were investigated. The firm says that the complaints not upheld were outside the terms of reference.

Just over half of complaints were about member companies, but were outside the Ombudsman Services’ responsibility, including inquiries that were early, too old or lacked information. Almost half were about non-member agents. Some inquiries (2%) were requests for information and literature.

This leaves just 19% of inquiries that went to adjudication, resulting in 1,001 property complaints being upheld, an 8% increase. Only 934 complaints were resolved in 2014-15.

In 35% of these cases, there was no action. Awards and remedies resolved the remainder, with the most common financial award at £100.

Of the seemingly large amount of initial complaints, very few are taken forward and in only a fraction of these the Ombudsman Services was against the agent. When consumers complain against agents, very few succeed.

According to Ombudsman Services, the top three complaints are for valuations and surveys (42%), property management (25%) and residential managing agents (9%).

Ombudsman Services are not alone, however, in not progressing with a large proportion of initial complaints. In its latest report, The Property Ombudsman resolved 2,511 cases in 2014, after receiving an initial 16,792 inquiries. For this firm, a greater amount (85%) are rejected.

The Property Ombudsman says that this could be because the consumer has gone straight to them and has not tried to sort the complaint out with the agent personally.

Furthermore, an ombudsman cannot deal with a case that has become the subject of litigation.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Homes are Being Let in Record Time

Published On: June 30, 2015 at 4:31 pm

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A third of new rental properties put up for let are being agreed before the existing tenant moves out, reveals Countrywide letting agents.

The firm found that the average UK rental home is let within 32 days, which is the shortest time on record.

Countrywide found that so far this year, 33% of all new lets were agreed while the property is still occupied, up from 27% in 2014.

Homes are Being Let in Record Time

Homes are Being Let in Record Time

The average rent price agreed while tenants are living in the property is 105% of the asking rent, an average of £35 a month more.

Comparatively, tenants moving into an empty property negotiate an average of £21 a month off the asking rent price.

In the capital, 51% of all new rental properties coming onto the market are agreed while the home is occupied, up from 41% last year. Contrastingly, just a quarter of new lets are agreed before the existing tenant moves out in the North East of England.

When an agreement is made before the tenant leaves the property, there is an average of just six days between the existing renter leaving and the new one moving in.

In one-in-ten cases, a new tenant moves in on the day that the existing tenant moves out.

If a property has not been let before the tenant leaves, the first week of marketing is when a landlord is most likely to achieve the highest rent.

During the first seven days of marketing, the average rent is agreed at the full asking price. This figure drops the longer the property is on the market.

Most potential tenants view a property in the first weekend after it comes onto the market. In London’s booming market, however, twice as many lets are agreed on a weekday than in any other part of the country.

Research Analyst at Countrywide, David Fell, says: “In larger rental markets, more new lets are being agreed well in advance of the current tenant leaving.

“As a result, we’ve seen void periods fall with a growing number of landlords having a new tenant lined up over a month before their existing tenant leaves. While leaving some time for maintenance between tenancies is advisable, increasingly, there’s just a matter of hours between a tenant moving out and one moving in.

“In more competitive markets, the first tenant to view a home is often willing to pay a small premium to ensure the landlord takes the property off the market and that no further viewings take place.”1

1 http://www.propertyindustryeye.com/properties-being-let-within-shortest-time-on-record/

New Crossrail Commuter Hotspots

The new Crossrail line will offer much better transport options for commuters travelling to Paddington station. For the first time, there were will be direct links to the West End and City.

Between Paddington and Oxford there are eight commuter options within a 60-minute journey time. They include Berkshire villages and great parts of Oxford, where a new station opens north of the city this autumn.

New research from Savills estate agent uncovers which areas are the best value for money and where property is performing most strongly.

Here are the top areas to look at:

Reading

Reading isn’t exactly the idyllic countryside setting that commuters are looking for, but the 26-minute journey cannot be argued with.

From 2018, Reading will also be on the Crossrail line. For commuters sticking to the Great Western mainline, once electrification is complete, they will also get a faster commute.

The average property in Reading is £288,274, an increase of around 9% in the last 12 months and 12% above pre-recession figures.

Managing Director of Parkers estate agents, Craig Pearson, says that the market in the town centre has “gone ballistic” due to the imminent transport improvements.

“Virtually every one and two-bedroom flat is being snapped up by an investor for buy-to-let,” he observes. “A standard one-bedroom flat now costs about £225,000; £25,000 more than it did in January.”1

Families moving to Reading search in the suburbs for good schools and houses with gardens. Maiden Erlegh School is rated good by Ofsted and is popular.

New Crossrail Commuter Hotspots

New Crossrail Commuter Hotspots

The most appealing homes in Reading are in the villages around the town. A partner at Knight Frank, Matthew Mannall, recommends Stoke Row, which features brick-and-flint houses and cottages, and is eight miles from the station.

He says: “It has a thriving community with a village shop, a post office, primary school and reputable restaurant The Crooked Billet.”1

The Crooked Billet is where actress Kate Winslet celebrated her first marriage to Jim Threapleton in 1998.

Goring

Goring & Streatley station is 53 minutes from Paddington with an annual season ticket costing £4,188. Along this line, the area has the highest average property prices of £546,923.

Of all the areas researched, Goring has also witnessed the strongest price growth, up 16.6% in the last year and 17.9% since 2007.

Director of Davis Tate estate agents, James Elliott, says that the villages of Goring and Streatley, which are separated by the Thames, boasts countryside and National Trust properties, such as Lardon Chase. The Chilterns and North Wessex Downs are also nearby.

However, Londoners moving to the area should be cautious – they can no longer buy a period property with a big garden for £500,000. Buyers should expect to pay around £400,000 for a three-bedroom post-war terrace house. Some older homes are priced between £1.5-£2m.

Oxford

Oxford just squeezes into the 60-minute journey category. Trains to Paddington take 57 minutes and an annual season ticket is £4,788.

An average home in the city costs £422,158. Oxford’s housing market is currently going through a boom and is outperforming London, up 10.8% in the last year and 34.3% since 2007.

This means that there is little affordable housing available, especially within walking distance to the station.

One area for wealthier buyers is Jericho, where residents enjoy painted cottages, shops, pubs and restaurants, and independent cinema, The Phoenix. Local primary schools, St Barnabas, and St Philip and St James are also popular.

Director of Savills, Simon Lawton, says that a two-bedroom cottage in Jericho has now hit £550,000-£650,000. There is also a shortage of larger homes.

For those looking for smaller properties, Grandpont and Osney offer Victorian terraces within walking distance of the station. A two-bedroom cottage costs around £500,000.

North Oxford is the wealthier part of the city, with four-bedroom houses costing from £1.5m.

A new station will open north of Oxford at Water Eaton this autumn. Services to Marylebone will take 58 minutes and a four-bedroom home in nearby Kidlington costs about £500,000.

Lawton says: “The new station will make Oxford much more doable for many more people. It is very good news.”1

1 http://homesandproperty.co.uk/area-guides/uk-areas/new-london-oxford-crossrail-trainline-eight-commuter-hotspots-watch

 

More to Wimbledon than the All England Club

Published On: June 30, 2015 at 2:48 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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With all eyes on SW19 in arguably the most iconic fortnight in the British sporting calendar, property investors are looking past the Pimms, strawberries and Maria Sharapova to see the other side of Wimbledon.

Boasting large properties, good local schools and a picturesque village full of greenery, the south-west London hotspot offers a lot more than the All England Lawn Tennis Club.

Costly

As is the norm, desirable locations such as Wimbledon come at a hefty price. The average property price in the village is £745,516, equating to £157,403 more expensive than the average property cost in the capital. What’s more, prices have soared quicker than an Andy Murray ace, rising by £174,988 since 2010.[1]

‘There was a hiccup with the election but we have been busier since then,’ said Edward Foley, owner of Winkworth in the village. ‘Demand is good. We get a lot of interest from people in Battersea and Fulham. They come to Wimbledon because they get more for their money in terms of property. They also come for the greenery, space for parking and that country feel,’ he added.[2]

At present, the most-costly streets in Wimbledon are Highbury Road and Parkside Avenue, where prices will set purchasers back a cool £6,249,116 and £6,145,871 respectively. Perhaps Mr Djokovic will be interested to know that the highest-value property currently on the market in Wimbledon Village is a seven-bed mansion, for £8,850,000. You cannot be serious?

Changing dynamic

The buyer landscape in SW19 is changing. British buyers still make up the bulk of the interested parties but there are a number of overseas investors looking to capitalise in the thriving market. Potential investors from nations such as Russia, India and China are said to looking into buying property in the area.

‘There is an increasing proportion of overseas buyers in the area,’ explains John Keeble, associate director of Hamptons International. ‘We have a lot of Chinese coming in and they’re interested in both houses and flats. We also have Norwegians, Germans and 2 per cent of the population is from South Africa. It’s a bit of everything.’[3]

Mr Foley noted that, ‘if you go to certain parts of the world, most people have heard of Wimbledon. It is world famous for tennis so overseas buyers feel comfortable with it. A lot of foreign buyers view buying a property in Wimbledon as a long-term investment but use it for immediate occupation. Overseas interest in Wimbledon has greater in the last six months.’[4]

More to Wimbledon than the All England Club

More to Wimbledon than the All England Club

Short-term opportunity

During the two weeks of the tournament, there are many opportunities for short-term lets. A growing number of homeowners are renting out their homes for the duration of the Championships, choosing to go on holiday, often paid for by rent being gained by the tennis fans letting their home.

Nicola Clark, lettings manager of John D Wood and Co’s Southfields branch, commented that, ‘in general, ‘the pricing for a short term let is higher than a long let. For the Wimbledon season, tenants expect all facilities to be provided in the property, including fully equipped, fully furnished rooms. This will even include crockery and bedding/linens, with bills included as well as satellite television and maid service.’[5]

She continued by saying, ‘typically, the lets are only for the two weeks of Wimbledon itself. Short-term lets during Wimbledon remain constant, as both players and visitors alike often prefer a real home to a hotel environment.’[6]

Neighbours

Demand for property in Wimbledon’s less illustrious neighbor Southfields is also on the rise. Prices in the town are now averaging £629,010, an increase of £156,188 over the last five years.[7]

Head of Sales for John D Wood & Co in Southfields Jonathan Loneysaid, ‘Southfields has long been a hidden gem, found more by accident than design, by buyers looking in the more established areas of Putney and Wimbledon. As demand in London has continued to outstrip supply, Southfields has suddenly found itself on more and more purchasers’ radars. Offering a great community feel with the green spaces of Wimbledon Park, great local shops and prominent schools, this popularity is bound to continue to grow.’[8]

Continuing, Loney stated, ‘the post-election bounce in Southfields is leading to higher sale prices and there are certainly good signs that prices are likely to steady increase in the next year to eighteen months.’ He feels that, ‘the Southfields Grid with its family Edwardian homes, is still the area of choice. However, there is also increasing demand for family homes in the Pulborough Triangle – an area of five roads just down from the station – and ‘Gardens’ area of Southfields – Gartmor GardensSouthdean Gardens and Kingscliffe Gardens, next to Wimbledon Park, which are seeing increases in popularity.[9]

All in all then, Wimbledon and its neighbours offer a clean winner of a property market.

[1] http://www.primelocation.com/discover/property-news/playing-the-property-grand-slam-in-wimbledon-29-06-15/#2xDR8yRdVWR01zRx.97