Posts with tag: flatsharing

Study looks into shift in flatsharing attitudes related to COVID-19 pandemic

Published On: June 29, 2021 at 8:08 am

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Categories: Tenant News

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A study conducted by the University of Bath has revealed significant shifts in attitudes towards where UK flatsharers want to live and who they live with since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Sponsored by flatsharing website ideal flatmate, the study interviewed flatsharers across the UK during the last six months. The website believes findings point to trends that are likely to remain beyond the lifting of all lockdown restrictions.

The results found that the pandemic has led to a reduction in the number of people saying they want to flatshare in the future. Those that do want to said it’ll be with a smaller group of people. This has led to an increased importance of certain personality traits with the highest shifts in factors being: cleanliness, sociability and the importance of spending time together.

64% of respondents stated that they would feel uncomfortable living with people who broke the social distancing rules. This may have ongoing implications for flatmate preferences in the future, particularly around attitudes towards vaccination.

Despite the pandemic, 68% of flatsharers still prefer to live in city locations. However, there has been a shift in locational preferences towards rural locations, such as villages, towns or suburbs. Many young sharers have also relocated back home to families during the pandemic.

The study indicates an increased importance for gardens and closeness to green space, with a 33% increase in flatsharers saying this was a key factor in the future. There is also an increased importance for work-appropriate space due to the demands of working from home which is expected to continue beyond the pandemic, with 55% of flatsharers now working from home more than they did before COVID-19.

Tom Gatzen, Co-Founder of ideal flatmate, commented: “The pandemic has seen an extraordinary change in people’s lives, attitudes and living circumstances in a short period of time. This study reflects the way flatsharers now feel and some of the different factors that are now important to them when choosing where to live and who to live with.

“At ideal flatmate, we have seen a lot of anecdotal evidence of sharers discussing attitudes to Covid before they move in with strangers, and this is borne out by the research with two-thirds not wanting to live with people who have broken the rules. This is likely to remain a factor as we move out of lockdown and the vaccine campaign is rolled out amongst the youngest population groups in the UK.”

Flatsharers raise budgets to combat higher rents

Published On: August 17, 2016 at 9:51 am

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Categories: Property News

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The typical flatsharing tenant has moved to increase their budget, in order to combat rental rises, according to a new report.

EasyRoommate’s latest Index reveals that in the second quarter of the year, tenants’ average budget was £531pcm, up 5% on the same period twelve months ago.

Since 2012, tenants’ average budgets have risen by 25%.

Increases

The flatsharing website reports that budgets have increased in an attempt to keep pace with average rents. According to data from the Index, rents rose by 13% between Q2 of 2015 and 2016.

In addition, the rental platform said that demand for shared rental properties has also risen over the same period. During the second quarter of this year, there were an average of five tenants looking at each room available. This was compared to four last year.

What’s more, the number of rooms being posted on the EasyRoommate website has risen substantially, by over 40% since 2015.

The average age of a flatmate is 28, with 37% of sharers aged between 21 and 25.

Flatsharers raise budgets to combat higher rents

Flatsharers raise budgets to combat higher rents

Finances

Student tenants utilising the platform has increased by 4% in the same period.

EasyRoommate has also moved to attack the number of letting agent fees which are being charged to tenants.

It has called for the Renters’ Rights Bill, currently being passed through Parliament, to be implemented to improve tenants’ finances.

Albin Servant, chief executive of EasyRoommate, said, ‘every time you use an estate agency to find accommodation, you might incur extra fees. Meanwhile Scotland decided to ban those hidden fees in 2012.’[1]

‘Rent fees need to be regulated,’ he added.[1]

[1] https://www.landlordtoday.co.uk/breaking-news/2016/8/flatsharers-increase-their-budgets-to-cope-with-rising-rents

Flatsharing is answer to save cash-Rightmove

Published On: January 8, 2016 at 11:38 am

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Categories: Finance News

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Save-to-buy renters can save up to £210 per month for a deposit by flatsharing, according to a new report by Rightmove.

Newcastle was found to be the city offering most value, with a two-bed flat just 11% more expensive than a one-bed.

Rises

Average asking rents were found to have increased in all regions during 2015. This was particularly felt in the East of England, where rental increases were higher than anywhere else in Britain. Rents here rose by 6.5%, compared to 0.5% in London.

Rightmove also hinted at a strong start to 2016, announcing that page views for both sellings and lettings increased by 22% over the Christmas period, in comparison to 2014. Renters in Bristol, Birmingham and Manchester were most likely to put down their mince pies to look at the site.

The traditional seasonal fall in quarter four couldn’t prevent all regions ending 2015 with an annual rise in rental costs. However, Rightmove believe that flatsharing is the answer to a number of tenants’ financial problems.

Cost-effective

In Newcastle, a typical one-bed flat sets a renter back £553 per month, with an average two-bed costing just £614. This indicates a possible saving of £246 per month, should a renter choose a two-bed with a housemate.

‘The potential saving of renting and sharing a two-bed rather than a one-bed flat is before factoring in reduced costs from splitting the bills,’ noted Sam Mitchell, Rightmove’s Head of Lettings. ‘It could be a good option for renters looking to save up for a deposit to buy or other financial commitment. The Government has various well-publicised initiatives to encourage the home-ownership that some tenants would love to achieve and while sharing can have its pitfalls it is a potentially lucrative solution.’[1]

Neighbouring Gateshead offers the second best value for a two-bed flat in comparison to a one-bed, with the difference being 11.3%. In Swindon, a two-bed flat is 16.9% more expensive, in Bracknell 18.7% and in Milton Keynes 20.5%.

Flatsharing is answer to save cash-Rightmove

Flatsharing is answer to save cash-Rightmove

Highs

Mitchell went on to say, ‘demand from tenants is at an all-time high and the amount of properties available to rent hasn’t been keeping pace. This has led to more people considering house sharing, a trend that is already very common in London and now growing in other areas. Rather than look at house shares or studios, tenants could team up with friends and look at bigger flats in some of these best value areas, they just need to make sure they’re aware of their legal obligations when signing a joint tenancy agreement. For those that want to buy but are struggling to save a deposit this could help speed up the savings process.’[1]

Concluding, Mitchell observed that, ‘after a 7.8% annual rise in London asking rents last year, a slowing of the rate of growth was due as more and more tenants found their affordability stretched. Outside of the capital last year rents rose by just 0.3%, so this year’s 3.8% could be a result of more professional renters moving into areas outside of London, to sought-after cities like Bristol and Birmingham. Looking ahead to 2016, it’s likely there will be an initial injection of supply onto the market as investors rush to complete purchases before the stamp duty change in April, so renters thinking about moving could find they have a better choice early in the year. From April onwards, we could see a restriction in supply which could feed through into even higher rents. [1]

[1] http://www.propertyreporter.co.uk/finance/sharing-a-2-bed-flat-could-save-%C3%A3%C2%A2200-claims-rightmove.html