The number of tenants experiencing rent increases dropped for the second consecutive month, according to the ARLA Propertymark October Private Rented Sector (PRS) report.
The research found that only a third – 37% – of agents witnessed landlords increasing rent compared to 40% in September and 48% in August. This is 13% lower than in October last year, when the figure stood at 50%.
The data also shows that the number of new prospective tenants rose to the highest on record for the month of October, with an average of 88 per branch.
Regionally, the West Midlands had the highest number of new tenants registered per branch, with an average of 173, and Scotland had the lowest figure with an average of 30 new prospective tenants registered per branch.
The number of properties managed per letting agent branch increased from 193 in September to 213 in October. Year-on-year this is an all-time high for the month of October, with the previous record being 201 in 2019.
The number of landlords selling their buy-to-let properties fell from five per branch in September, to four in October.
Angela Davey, president, ARLA Propertymark, commented: “This month’s figures are testament to the fact that letting agents are continuing to support landlords and their tenants during the pandemic, with rent increases continuing to fall for a second month in a row.
“As the UK experiences continued lockdown measures and regional restrictions, it is essential that tenancies are maintained to keep the rent flowing as the stability of the private rental sector is key to the economy’s bounce back from the impact of Covid-19.”
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