Posts with tag: Universal Credit

‘Absurd’ benefit freeze must end, says National Residential Landlord Association

Published On: April 1, 2022 at 8:31 am

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The NRLA is calling on the Government to unfreeze the Local Housing Allowance to cover average rent.

Official data suggests that 56% of private renters relying on Universal Credit have an average gap of £100 a month between the amount they receive in housing cost support and rent payments, reports the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA).

Almost 60% of renters with two children relying on Universal Credit to help pay their rent have a shortfall between their rent and the benefits they receive.

Regionally, the proportion of tenants affected ranged from just over 40% in London (although based on a much higher number of claimants) to over 68% in Wales.

The Local Housing Allowance is used to calculate the amount tenants can receive to support housing costs as part of a Universal Credit payment. In response to the pandemic the Government lifted it in April 2020 so that it covered the bottom 30% of private rents in any given area. In April last year the rate was frozen in cash terms.

As a result of the freeze, housing benefit support is no longer linked to current rents. It means the number of properties that private renters in receipt of Universal Credit can afford will steadily decline.

Office for National Statistics (ONS) data says that 53% of adults who rent their home reported that they could not afford an unexpected expense. This is happening despite private rents across the UK having increased by far less than inflation.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the NRLA, comments: “It is simply absurd that housing benefit support fails to reflect the reality of rents as they currently stand. All the freeze is doing is exacerbating the already serious cost of living crisis.

“The Chancellor needs to listen and respond to the concerns of both renters and landlords and unfreeze housing benefits as a matter of urgency.”

Poll reveals effect of Universal Credit cut on private rental sector

Published On: January 26, 2022 at 9:18 am

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A YouGov poll of private landlords in England and Wales reveals the effects of the decision to cut Universal Credit.

In October last year, the Government cut Universal Credit by £20 a week, following a temporary increase in response to the pandemic.

Following this announcement, a YouGov poll of private landlords across England and Wales took place for the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA).

It reveals almost one in ten private landlords renting to Universal Credit claimants have experienced at least one tenant having difficulties paying their rent due to this benefit cut.

Of those landlords who were either currently letting to a Universal Credit claimant, or who had done so last year, 9% reported having at least one tenant experiencing difficulties because of the cut.

According to official statistics, says the NRLA, of those private rented households in England and Wales receiving support through Universal Credit to pay their rent, 55% had a gap between the support they received and their rent payments.

The NRLA is warning that this will only become worse because of the Government’s decision last year to freeze in cash terms housing cost support. As a result, in the years ahead the level of benefit support available will be able to cover the rent on ever fewer numbers of properties.

The NRLA is calling on the Government to reverse its decision to freeze the Local Housing Allowance rate and ensure it properly reflects market rents.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the NRLA, comments: “Benefit payments are failing to give tenants or landlords confidence that they will be able to cover rents. This basic problem lies at the heart of a broken system in desperate need of reform.

“With households facing a cost-of-living squeeze, it is vital that the benefits system gives the protection that tenants deserve. That is why the Chancellor needs to end the housing benefit freeze as a matter of urgency. Without this many tenants and landlords face an uncertain future about how to keep tenancies going.”

Autumn Budget announced: Changes welcome but not enough

In yesterday’s Autumn Budget announcement, Chancellor Rishi Sunak announced that the Universal Credit taper will be cut from 63% to 55% from 1st December 2021.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), comments: “(Yesterday’s) announcement is welcome news for those private tenants who have struggled to afford their rents throughout the pandemic, despite private rents falling in real terms.

“However, it does not undo the damage that previous decisions to freeze housing benefit rates in cash terms will cause. It is simply bizarre to have a system in which support for housing costs will no longer track market rents. The Chancellor needs to undo this unjust policy as matter of urgency.”

Another key announcement welcomed by the NRLA is that the deadline for residents to report and pay Capital Gains Tax after selling UK residential property has increased from 30 days after the completion date to 60 days as of 27th October 2021.

Nicky Stevenson, Managing Director at national estate agent group Fine & Country, also comments on this news: “Millions of homeowners across the country will be pleased to hear that the Chancellor has resisted calls to increase Capital Gains Tax.

“Though CGT has long been an emotive issue for some, there is no amount of amending that would have assisted in making up for gaps in public finances created by the pandemic.

“HMRC has already seen CGT receipts jump 62% in the last five years. Increasing taxes further at a time when the economy is still recovering from the worst shock on record would not have been a wise move by the Chancellor in the Autumn Budget.”

The NRLA also welcomes the Government’s pledge to bring forward exemptions to the Shared Accommodation Rate for victims of domestic abuse and victims of modern slavery from October 2023 to October 2022. The Shared Accommodation Rate limits housing benefit support for single people under 35 to a room in a shared house. Those vulnerable will be able to claim the higher 1-bedroom self-contained Local Housing Allowance rate.

Over 100,000 renters on Universal Credit at risk of eviction due to government cut

Published On: September 30, 2021 at 8:08 am

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Over 100,000 low-income renters in England on Universal Credit will be at least two or more months behind on their rent when the planned £20 cut comes next week, Crisis reports.

The homelessness charity analysed UK government data, with its findings raising fears that thousands will be at risk of being made homeless.

Crisis points out that the cut will see people on Universal Credit lose an average of £87 per month or the equivalent of £1,040 over a year. It fears it will hit struggling households amid rapidly soaring energy prices, a freeze on housing benefit that isn’t keeping up with rising rents in most parts of the country, and the possibility of further redundancies in the wake of the Government’s furlough scheme ending today.

The charity also says thousands are under incredible pressure to keep a roof over their head. With the eviction ban in England now over and notice periods as low as just four weeks for those with four or more months of arrears, Crisis is warning that a further drop in income could lead to a surge in homelessness unless the £20 cut is reversed.

Jon Sparkes, Chief Executive of Crisis, said:For many struggling renters this cut could be the final blow that forces them from their homes.

“We know that when people have somewhere stable to live, they are in a better position to find work, build their careers and contribute to the economy as it re-opens. Taking this vital lifeline away risks undermining all of this.

 “If we are truly serious about levelling up the country and rebuilding our economy so it works for everyone, then the UK Government must change course and keep the £20 uplift so that people don’t needlessly lose their homes this winter and we have a fighting chance at recovery.

“The UK Government assured people they would not lose their home because of the crisis; we must not fail them now.”

UK renters could be pushed into poverty by government benefit cuts

A joint statement warning about the impact the UK Government’s benefit cuts could have on renters has been released this week.

The Big Issue Ride Out Recession Alliance, Crisis, The Mortgage Works, Nationwide Building Society, the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA), Propertymark, StepChange Debt Charity, and Shelter have together released this statement:

The UK Government must complete and publish a full assessment of the impact on renters of their decisions to freeze Local Housing Allowance and cut Universal Credit, which risk pushing many households into poverty, problem debt, and homelessness.

In the wake of the pandemic, we saw bold and swift action from the Government to prevent a housing debt crisis including restoring Local Housing Allowance rates to the 30th percentile of market rents and increasing the Universal Credit Personal Allowance.

With the economic impact of the pandemic increasing the financial strain on families, across the country the number of private rented households in receipt of the housing element of Universal Credit increased by 107% between February 2020 and February 2021. Over 55% of these households have a shortfall between the housing support they receive and the rent they have to pay. 

The UK Government has confirmed that where such shortfalls exist, the median amount is £100 a month. This points to a need for continued support for families and individuals to cover the cost of rents. Yet since April this year, Local Housing Allowance has been frozen in cash terms, and later this year, Universal Credit will be cut by £20 a week. 

Whilst the Institute for Fiscal Studies has described changes to Local Housing Allowance as “arbitrary and unfair” we have seen no assessment from the UK Government of the impact either of these policies will have on the capacity of recipients to cover rent payments. 

As organisations representing landlords, letting agents, tenants, people facing homelessness, and debt advice services, we are united in calling on the UK Government to complete and publish a full assessment of the impact of both of these policies on the ability of renters to meet their housing costs.

We believe that the UK Government should reverse its decisions to cut Universal Credit and to freeze Local Housing Allowance. To apply policies like these without doing any meaningful impact assessment is, we argue, lacking the necessary foresight and consideration of the impact they will have on people’s security of tenure and well-being and for many will threaten their chance of recovery.

Rent guarantee could help Universal Credit claimants find a privately rented home

A study has been undertaken to explore ways to encourage private rental sector (PRS) landlords to support tenancies from people receiving Universal Credit.

Rent guarantee and upfront cash payments from local authorities are most effective in opening up the PRS for people receiving benefits according to research from the Centre for Homelessness Impact, the Behavioural Insights Team and the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA).

The research involved more than 2,700 landlords across England and Wales. It found that these approaches had the greatest positive impact on landlords’ openness to renting to people in receipt of these approaches had the greatest positive impact on landlords’ openness to renting to people in receipt of benefit. However, the overall willingness of landlords to rent to those in receipt of benefits still remained relatively low, highlighting the need for policy changes to be made to drive change.

Each participant was asked about different scenarios to understand how they would react and respond across two broad areas:

1. Whether disclosing additional information about a tenant has any impact on increasing landlord willingness to continue with the application of someone receiving Universal Credit

Landlords were sent information on:

  • Pre-tenancy training: A certificate of completion and schedule for a tenancy skills programme 
  • Budget planner: A table of the tenant’s income & expenditure 
  • Alternative payment arrangement (APA) leaflet: Information about APA, which is the process in England whereby housing benefit is transferred directly to the landlord (as opposed to being paid as part of the lump sum Universal Credit payment to the tenant) 

2. Which Local Authority incentives or support programmes are most effective at increasing landlord willingness to rent to someone receiving Universal Credit.

This considered:

  • £1,000 cash upfront: a cash payment upon signing a tenancy agreement; 
  • Rent guarantee: a written guarantee from the Local Authority that they will cover late or unpaid rent; 
  • Deposit bond: a cash amount equivalent to one month’s rent set aside to cover any costs a landlord may incur during the course of the tenancy; 
  • Support from a landlord liaison officer: a dedicated resource that acts as a single point of contact for private landlords who need support with a tenancy

Landlords who received information about budget planners, pre-tenancy training or APA reported very similar willingness to rent to potential tenants as those who received no additional information. This suggests that these are less effective at changing landlords’ attitudes than previously expected.

Significantly, the study indicates that the willingness of landlords to rent to people receiving Universal Credit remains low. Even with the strongest interventions, landlords’ willingness to let properties to people at risk of homelessness fell between ‘somewhat unlikely’ and ‘neutral’ (with neutral being the middle point of a 7-point scale).

Dr Ligia Teixeira, Chief Executive of the Centre for Homelessness Impact, said: “Taking an evidence-based approach to unlocking the private rented sector for people in receipt of Universal Credit who were previously less likely to gain access, is just one way in which we might end homelessness sustainably by focusing on prevention instead of mitigation.

“By making sure more housing options, including the private rented sector, are available to people who are in receipt of Universal Credit and at risk of homelessness, these trials help us move towards an environment where both landlords and prospective tenants have their needs met.”

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the NRLA, said: “The private rented sector can play a valuable role in providing longer term accommodation for those at risk of homelessness or struggling to maintain a tenancy. It is vital that policymakers heed the findings of this research to engage with landlords effectively and ensure they are confident that any risks they perceive will be addressed.

“As the research shows, the central element for landlords is continued rent payments. Government holds the key to this, through continuing to link local housing allowance to market rents, improving the administration of Universal Credit and better utilising guaranteed rent schemes at a local level. Without taking these vital steps, the Government will not tackle the homelessness crisis.”

Eva Kolker, policy lead for housing and homelessness from the Behavioural Insights Team, said: “This has been a great partnership with the Centre for Homelessness Impact and NRLA producing some really important results with policy implications for both central government and local authorities. Most research on reducing homelessness through the private rented sector focuses on tenant behaviour, but far less looking at landlord decision-making and behaviour. The participation of the NRLA in this partnership allowed us to run the UK’s first ever behavioural trial with landlords.”