Increasing rents mean tenants have to settle for less space

Strong rental growth has meant that tenants’ budgets do not stretch as far as they used to.

The two years between July 2020 and July 2022 marked the largest erosion of tenants’ buying power over any period since the launch of the Hamptons lettings index in 2013. Consequently, renters are having to trade down and lose a bedroom in order to spend the same amount of money on rent as they did in 2020.

According to Hamptons, between July 2020 and July 2022, average rents in Great Britain rose by 16.2% or £165 a month. In July 2022, the average studio (£817pcm) cost the same as an average one-bed 27 months ago; the average one-bed (£929pcm) cost the equivalent of an average two-bed 24 months ago and finally the average two-bed (£1,068pcm) cost what the average three-bed cost 16 months ago. This typically means that what the average tenant is paying in rent today, would have bought them an extra bedroom two years ago.

Tenants in the South West have seen what they get for their money fall faster than anywhere else.  Here, tenants saw their spending power eroded by the equivalent of a bedroom over just 16 months due to rents rising by 18.7% or £169pcm. Scotland followed over 17 months and the North West over 19 months.  At the other end of the scale, it took an average of 30 months for Welsh tenants to see their money shrink by the equivalent of a bedroom.

Prior to the last 24 months, it had taken six years (or 74 months) for average rents to rise by an amount equivalent to the cost of a bedroom, with the largest increases in Northern England.  This means the rent tenants pay today will buy them an average of two fewer bedrooms than eight years ago.

Months for tenants’ spending power to fall by the equivalent of a bedroom

  Months for tenants’ spending power to fall by the equivalent of a bedroom Rental growth
South West 16 18.7%
Scotland 17 20.2%
North West 19 18.8%
North East 20 17.9%
East of England 21 15.5%
Yorkshire & Humber 22 14.6%
East Midlands 24 16.5%
South East 24 16.1%
West Midlands 25 14.5%
Greater London 27 15.2%
Wales 30 14.3%
Great Britain 24 16.2%

Source: Hamptons

Rents across Great Britain rose by an average of 8.3% over the last 12 months, marking a gradual slowdown from late spring when rental growth peaked at 11.5%.  This means that rents are 15.7% above where they were when Covid struck.  Despite the rate of growth slowing for the third month in a row, July’s figure still marks the sixth strongest annual increase recorded during the last decade.

Growth has also been driven by a recovery in rents being achieved for smaller urban homes.  One-beds rose by an average of 10.4% year-on-year, while four-beds recorded growth of 6.6% annually. This reflects city rents playing catch up following Covid.  The average one-bed now costs 13.6% more than pre-Covid times compared to four-beds that are 17.6% above pre-Covid levels.

Inner London continues to record faster rental growth than anywhere else in the country by a significant margin. Here, rents are up 33.6% on the same time last year.  This rapid rate of growth reflects the post-Covid trough it’s being compared against.  This will work its way through in a couple of months, likely bringing down the year-on-year figure significantly.  As such, it leaves average rents only 1.5% above where they were in January 2020 and still on par with July 2016.

The number of homes available to rent continued to fall in July.  There were 9% fewer rental properties available in July than at the same time last year and 52% fewer than two years ago.  London recorded the sharpest fall in stock anywhere in the country, down 37% year-on-year.  Stock levels are now so low that July saw more homes come onto the market than there were homes still on the market from previous months, the first time this has happened since our records began in 2012.

Average rents on newly let properties 

  July-22 July-21 YoY Change %
Greater London £2,008  £1,787 12.4%
   Inner London £2,672  £2,001 33.6%
   Outer London £1,885  £1,747 7.9%
East of England £1,249  £1,237 1.0%
South East £1,074  £983 9.3%
South West £1,126  £1,064 5.8%
Midlands £824  £750 10.0%
North £782  £719 8.8%
Wales £750  £739 1.4%
Scotland £824  £734 12.3%
Great Britain £1,166  £1,077 8.3%
Great Britain (Exc. London) £951  £895 6.3%

Source: Hamptons

Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at Hamptons, said: “After two years of record rental growth, tenants aren’t seeing their budgets stretch as far as they used to.  And they are likely to be squeezed further still by a mix of investors leaving the market and the landlords left behind looking to pass on their higher mortgage costs.  Tenants trying to move are increasingly facing a cost-cliff with market rents rising faster than what they’ve been paying for their current homes.  Often this means they face compromising on what and where they rent next, with some having to trade down.

“There are some signs that the rental stock slump is close to bottoming out.  But with two-thirds fewer homes on the market than five years ago, there isn’t room for them to fall much further.  In a reversal of last year, it’s city centre markets which have seen the biggest year-on-year falls in the number of homes up for rent, meaning it’s here that tenants are still facing double-digit rental growth.  Meanwhile suburban and country markets have quietly recorded small rises in stock levels and have seen rental growth soften.”

 

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One Comment

  1. northernlandlord

    The rental market just like the housing market is subject to market forces. House price growth is slowing as pricing reaches levels that people are unwilling or increasingly, unable to afford. As owner occupancy slips out of reach, more people turn to the PRS. Increased PRS demand coupled with dwindling supply due to short-sighted Government interventions resulting in increased costs and less security for landlords means rents are rising. The demand and willingness to pay rising rents shows no sign of abating just yet. Indeed, in some very high demand areas we see images of people queuing around the block to view properties for rent and even hear stories of prospective tenants gazumping each other. Prospective tenants are seeking out smaller properties to pay lower rents. Demand for HMO accommodation is rising for the same reason. I suspect that not many of us would choose to live in an HMO if we could afford the rent on something self-contained. The losers in all this will be low income and benefit tenants typically occupying one and two bed houses in less desirable areas. Rents are lower here but landlord costs are pretty universal so landlords margins are being squeezed dis-proportionally. As the “richer” tenants move downmarket existing tenants will be squeezed out. In my own (northwest) area older two bed terraced properties that rented for around the £500 mark two years ago are now commanding rents of £700+ and demand has never been higher.

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