- Three in ten (32%) ARLA letting agents reported that rents increased in April
- In London, the average number of landlords per branch selling their buy to let properties doubled between March and April
- Supply and demand has remained the same in April
- Nine in ten agents reported they were happy with the General Election result, according to ARLA April PRS Report
Three in ten (32%) ARLA letting agents reported that rents increased in April, according to the Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) monthly Private Rental Sector (PRS) Report for April.
The report found that tenants living in the North West were the most affected by monthly rent increases in April – with 46% of landlords reporting an increase in the region. With Labour’s rent cap proposals thrown out, eight in ten (79%) ARLA agents have predicted that rents will increase over the next five years.
Sales of buy to let
In the last month, the number of landlords selling their buy to let properties has increased; particularly in London. ARLA agents in London saw the number of landlords selling their buy-to-let properties double between March and April – rising from three to six properties on average per branch. Scottish agents saw an increase from four to seven buy to let properties going up for sale in the last month, whilst the national average increased from three to four buy to let properties up for sale on average per branch.
David Cox, managing director of Association of Residential Letting Agents (ARLA) comments on this month’s findings: “It is interesting that we have seen an increase in the amount of landlords
selling their buy to let properties in the last month, which is likely to have been a result of political uncertainty. We know that Labour’s plans within the PRS were unpopular for many landlords and agents, so this increase in those selling their buy to let properties may have been a knee jerk reaction to the possibility of Labour’s proposals coming in to practice.”
Following the General Election result earlier this month, nine in ten (90%) ARLA letting agents were happy with the outcome of a majority Conservative government – with almost all agents (95%) believing the result is good news for the Private Rented Sector. More than one in ten (13%) of those agents said it was good news because the Conservatives will interfere less with the industry and a tenth (11%) believe the result will provide certainty and stability to the market
Supply and demand
In April, supply and demand remained similar to last month. On average, ARLA member branches managed 193 properties, compared to 192 in March. In April, ARLA agents reported an average of 36 prospective tenants per branch, which remains exactly the same as March.
David Cox continues: “It is going to be interesting to see what happens in the market in the next few months following the election result and whether we see an increase in supply of rented accommodation as a result of the Conservative’s promise to build 200,000 new starter homes offered at 20% discount to first time buyers. This policy will help first time buyers make that leap onto the housing ladder and as a result this will hopefully free up rental property.
“Hopefully, now the country is under less political uncertainty, we will begin to see the market pick up again and with the policies on offer in both the rental sector and housing market we should see the overall market heading into the right direction.”
For more information and the full report, please visit the ARLA website: http://www.arla.co.uk/