Updating post from Reddit.

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Posted by Educational-Creme493 3 days ago
An “exodus among landlords" could be triggered by the Renters’ Rights Bill, reducing the supply of affordable housing
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Posted by Show_Green 3 days ago

"Could be"? Already has been.

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Posted by theydontlikeitupems 3 days ago

BlackRock are waiting in the wings to buy up all the properties landlords are selling it's collusion between government and corporations disgusting

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Posted by plinkoplonka 3 days ago

Yep, and then all the people here who I'm stuck of calling me a parasite will be desperate for private landlords who actually care about their tenants.

But it'll be too late by then. They'll be one more step to their shelter being tied to a job, like healthcare in the USA is.

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Posted by pro-shirker 3 days ago

Yep - PE got into buying vets practices. Guess what - prices up by 30-40%+ and there is nothing you can do about it, except find a local vet that hasn’t sold out. The principle is identical - screw down costs, maximise profits. And if tenants don’t toe the line - they’ll be arguing with big corps and legal teams, who will have legal procedures off pat. Given the scale, they will have people whose sole jobs will be efficiently evicting tenants who cause trouble, and not taking on tenants who are likely to incur costs and reduce profits.

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Posted by Martrance 3 days ago

We REALLY need a new model of capitalism. This shareholder primacy/supremacy is DISGUSTING. People (and animals) are dying and suffering due to their greed.

End shareholder primacy

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Posted by furry-borders 3 days ago

Or move away from capitalism all together.

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Posted by RealNameJohn_ 3 days ago

Private for-profit rentals are only one aspect of the larger rental market. There are other alternatives but I suspect I’ll be banned from this sub for daring to mention something that challenges the status quo.

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Posted by bluejasmine___ 3 days ago

Is it appalling that asset management firms can buy up and hoard property - yes. That doesn't make it ok that many landlords squeeze as much profit as possible out of something essential for humans to survive.

To refer to large scale landlords as parasitic is a fitting metaphor as housing is essential for survival and they are sucking every penny possible out of the poor and working class. To hoard something that is finite, in short supply and essential for survival is not beneficial to society.

There are solutions that don't involve a significant percentage of our property market being owned by "investors"/landlords and asset management firms, you know. If only our government had been investing in social and low income housing and putting caps on how much property people can buy and rent out on Airbnb, such as in Switzerland, we wouldn't be in this position.

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Posted by Liturginator9000 2 days ago

It's weird seeing that sentiment in the UK, there's still significant public housing stock even if it's lower than certain countries in the EU or Singapore which is a prime example of how to do it, even if highly localised. Australia went the private landlord route around the time the UK went more social housing, the Aussie model has shown itself to be a giant failure unless you're an investor, private landlords have way too much power for the service they're offering and investors just put even more pressure on supply. So you get shit value for money, less rights than everywhere in the EU, and no way out because it's unaffordable to buy.

And people want this model? People think landlords provide a necessary service rather than just being growth hindering rent seekers and a lazy out for a government that doesn't want to do its job

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Posted by Ancient-Watch-1191 3 days ago

Don't expect that you yourself will escape the consequences of the US private equity take over.

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Posted by tambi33 3 days ago

I'm so benevolent type shi

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Posted by margieler 2 days ago

The same private landlords that also increase their rent prices stupid amounts that cause mothers to commit suicide?

This might be an awful decision but to act like Private Landlords somehow care more about their tenants is laughable.

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Posted by Spuckuk 2 days ago

Still a parasite though

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Posted by 0023jack 3 days ago

as someone who has rented from both, private landlords and large firms, I much prefer renting from the large firm. Not only do they care far more about me, they actually follow the law…

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Posted by EmployeeStrange6834 3 days ago

I've heard there is also an exemption on stamp duty if you are buying more than 8 properties at a time...

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Posted by MyStackOverflowed 3 days ago

has to be from the same owner. So only really suits buying up new builds directly from the developer

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Posted by Admirable_Ice2785 3 days ago

That's even worse

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Posted by mrcharlesevans 3 days ago

Buy them up and do what with them, exactly?

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Posted by theydontlikeitupems 3 days ago

They will rent them back out they have the resources to do it whilst most people rent one or two houses they will rent hundreds even thousands and the rent will go sky high trustme

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Posted by mrcharlesevans 3 days ago

"Trust me, bro".

Absolute rubbish. If anything, a huge corporation renting thousands of houses will have cheaper rents. Economies of scale and less greedy than some prat with a BMW M3 and an interest-only buy-to-let mortgage.

Anyway, BlackRock aren't buying up UK rental properties so you're talking shite.

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Posted by Ok_Air4372 3 days ago

You're on crack if you think a giant investment corporation is going to have lower prices than a private landlord because of "economies of scale".

It's a completely demand driven market with little supply. They can and do buy up large swathes of houses and can up cost across the board, they do not care about being undercut, this isn't someone who relies on the rent to pay their own mortgage.

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Posted by ChrisGunner 3 days ago

I'm a little confused. Why would a huge corporation want to charge less for rent? How exactly did these huge corporations become "huge"? It's definitely not by being nice and empathetic to people. XD

>less greedy

Mate, they are literally HUGE corporation BECAUSE they are greed! Bru what?!

I think you're comparing properties with supermarket products.

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Posted by deepincider95 3 days ago

Wishful thinking. There have already been examples of price gouging from corporate landlords in the US.

There are also loads of examples online where private equity has bought into the private rental sector over the last few years.....

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Posted by ShroedingersMouse 3 days ago

unlike private landlords who are paragons of virtue and genorousity ofc.

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Posted by RagerRambo 3 days ago

It's absolutely the case. Look at Lloyds banking group, John Lewis, and the American PEs. If you don't know, don't comment. Simple.

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

L&G, Lloyds, Blackrock they are all at it.

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Posted by _shedlife 3 days ago

But you don't know. John Lewis are building, creating supply. You're against more rentals?

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Posted by RagerRambo 3 days ago

I am against corporations owning absolutely everything. From the music you stream to the water you drink, and yes, to where people rent. They make obscene profits, legally avoid taxes, and are treated favourably by governments. Why? Because they yield influence due to their size and connections in governments and industry. Do you think it's a coincidence small Landlords have been exiting ever since the first of the tax reforms?

Tenants think Jim & Sue, the middle-aged Landlords, have power. Wait till the entire market is controlled by two or three megacorps, and you are a user ID on a system. Good luck negotiating a rental increase, or trying to explain your employer paid you late this month while you're charged admin fee. I mean you just need to look at America for what's coming.

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Posted by _shedlife 3 days ago

So you're against more rental supply. Interesting take. I am a landlord, I'm not exiting.

> They make obscene profits,

Wrong again

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Posted by RagerRambo 3 days ago

I didn't realise I was debating a parrot. Polly wanna a cracker?

Edit: and now you've blocked me because you can't put a counterargument forward.

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Posted by _shedlife 3 days ago

Ha. You're clearly unable to debate and are upset you were wrong to begin with. Nevermind eh.

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Posted by exbritballer 3 days ago

The one thing prices don't do when there are huge monopolistic suppliers is go down.

For tenants to have real choice, there needs to be not just a choice of properties, but a choice of landlords. Forcing small BTL landlords out of the market to be replaced by large corporations is harmful to tenants who will see their choice of landlord reduced or even eliminated.

Also, how many PE investor-types do you know? They are mostly in it to maximise a return, and, done through a company, have the advantage that, unlike BTL mortgages, commercial loans are tax deductable.

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Posted by morewhitenoise 3 days ago

They are. Its in the public domain.

"Trust me bro" - ie. do a google you cretin

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Posted by mrcharlesevans 3 days ago

Bollocks. Link or GTFO, parasite.

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Posted by uklandlords-ModTeam 3 days ago

This is a community for Landlords. You can be anti-landlord in other places like /r/HousingUK/

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Posted by Cafuzzler 3 days ago

> If anything, a huge corporation renting thousands of houses will have cheaper rents.

Exactly! That's why diamonds are so cheap too! /s

Economies of scale relates to producing the same good for less-per-unit when manufactured at a larger scale. These homes are already produced and so they either have or haven't benefited from scale. Any investment firm wouldn't see that benefit, even if they were benevolent instead of profit-driven.

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Posted by theydontlikeitupems 3 days ago

Thanks for Ur reply UV obviously been to the same school of economics as Donald trump Ur the one talking bollox

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Posted by plinkoplonka 3 days ago

Rent them out.

When they pass the tipping point, they'll end up tied to jobs.

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Posted by [deleted] 3 days ago

[deleted]

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Posted by theydontlikeitupems 3 days ago

I was talking about UK housing not usa

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Posted by alibrown987 2 days ago

BlackRock is absolutely not going to buy up thousands of individual houses and flats in converted houses across the UK. It would be a massive operational burden which would eat up most of the rental income. They can make more money on their investment with less risk elsewhere, especially when LL yields are low (eg building new blocks of build-to-rent flats which is becoming very common for institutional money).

If for arguments sake they really, really wanted to do this then they would just buy a company that already does it.

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

>we could see a landlord exodus when the new rules are introduced

You will see the same line verbatim on every change, all the way back to George Osborne taxing BTL on revenue instead of profit.

Some will certainly vacate; these rules are terrible for the bottom end of the market. I can't see how any landlord whose target market is DSS/LHA/Universal Credit tenants would think a new tenancy is viable. Others will shrug it off, just a bit more vetting or tougher requirements.

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Posted by Careful_Adeptness799 3 days ago

There won’t be any private landlords for the bottom end of the market IMO.

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Posted by koothooloo 3 days ago

There’s a multi-flat DSS a few doors down from me, 9 flats all getting the standard rate from social services, how would that be at risk? (I think it’s rubbish BTW, forcing people to live in such cramped spaces, but that is a different conversation)

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

With the new regulation, tenants get three months of free rent until the landlord can take action. Then, they must arrange a court hearing, which will take months. Taking under a year to evict a tenant will be a win.

Remember, these are DSS tenants - no assets or income, so any CCJ is worthless. The deposit is capped at one month's rent.

Now multiply that by nine.

Unless you have a homeowner guarantor, it's going to get very difficult. So let's hope Angela Rayner can get those social houses built.

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Posted by fgspq 3 days ago

Housing doesn't get destroyed just because a landlord has to sell up. The housing is still there, despite the fact that the landlord has forgotten that the value of investments can go down as well as up.

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Posted by Aeowalf 3 days ago

Their investment hasnt lost value though, government regulations have just made renting it out too much of a liability

This will hurt renters as LLs exit and sell up to owner occupiers (driving up prices) or to PE funds who will seek higher yields (driving up prices)

The only solution to not having enough housing is to build more housing

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Posted by triguy96 3 days ago

It's going to be massively unpopular to say but there is enough housing. There is too much of the wrong type of housing owned by the wrong people. I can't find the link to the study now, but the findings suggest that we need much more social housing, much fewer single and dual occupancy dwellings and more densely packed housing.

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Posted by Impressive-Ad-5914 3 days ago

You could not be more right, there needs to be far more social housing etc as you have said. But who is going to build it? The government? With what funding? Development companies have zero incentive.

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Posted by burdman444 3 days ago

Trick is not to incentivise them to do it, but rather tell them. In France the Local Authority will say 'we want x built here' and developers apply. In the UK LA's say 'we have this plot of land, who wants to build what and how much will you pay us? Hardly surprising we lack social housing with such a system.

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Posted by Dangerous-Surprise65 3 days ago

Hang on...who gets given social housing? It's meant to be " those in need". In practise it seems to be mainly crooks and their associates. Most of the "single mum" seem to have dealer boyfriends or brothers etc Read the local paper, the vast majority of those caught for drug offences and violent crime are all living in social housing - why? Because they gave no legal source of income so they rent in the PRS

First and foremost, reform who receices social housing and have a way of removing the privilege for people who commit crime etc.

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Posted by Spuckuk 2 days ago

You sound like actual scum

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Posted by triguy96 3 days ago

>Most of the "single mum" seem to have dealer boyfriends or brothers etc Read the local paper, the vast majority of those caught for drug offences and violent crime are all living in social housing - why?

Because poor people commit more crime and poor people are more likely to be in need of social housing. It's not rocket science bloody hell

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Posted by Dangerous-Surprise65 3 days ago

It's not about poverty. Plenty of poor people work hard. My parents did when we were young family. Social housing is handed out too easily. It is a safe harbour for criminal activity. If it was removed in the case of criminality, suddenly you would give a disincentive for criminal behaviour in council housing

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Posted by triguy96 3 days ago

Do poor people commit more crime or not?

Additionally, if you have unspent convictions you can't get social housing so

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Posted by Dangerous-Surprise65 3 days ago

No I don't think the poor do commit more crime. Unspent convictions may block social housing for you, but your gf probably still has a council house, or your sister, or your mum, so you just use that as a base for your dealing / mugging/ stabbing

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Posted by triguy96 3 days ago

>No I don't think the poor do commit more crime

You're just divorced from reality.

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Posted by aRatherLargeCactus 3 days ago

… poor people are overwhelmingly more likely to be convicted of a crime and experience crime. Every available statistic we have confirms this.

Not only because poverty breeds desperation, poor mental health, etc, but because our legal system is emphatically pay-to-win.

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Posted by Liturginator9000 2 days ago

Poverty is a loop where you enter it from bad family luck, bad genetic luck, or just flat bad luck (single mum with useless or gone dad), then you're stuck in it with an addiction or depression or a kid so the climb out becomes incredibly difficult (not impossible).

That some people have the traits to escape doesn't make them attainable to others, plenty of people escape poverty through hard work, but many more just don't have the capacity to simply 'learn to code' or otherwise pick themselves up out of it. These people still need housing else you enter a tailspin of crime, degeneracy, enclaves of disadvantage and eventually fascism (see: reform UK)

Australia and the US both have single digit social housing, both still have crime, the US in particular far more. It's all pegged to poverty mate

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Posted by SamPlinth 3 days ago

>Most of the "single mum" seem to have dealer boyfriends or brothers Read the local paper, the vast majority of those caught for drug offences and violent crime are all living in social housing

Wow. You don't see what's wrong with that reasoning? Really?

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Posted by Dangerous-Surprise65 3 days ago

Not at all....I bought houses with council tenants in them. They have in large part ended up being crooks. Some charged with some very nasty offences prior to me becoming the landlord. Have booted them, too much headache

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Posted by SamPlinth 3 days ago

I'll take that as a "Yes."

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Posted by PatemanArts 3 days ago

Yes because we have such little council housing it will more likely go to people a small minority of people who know how to get it.

But if we had a lot more of of it, it would not only be available to a broader group of people but also mediate private housing costs down.

The fix is still more council housing lol

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Posted by MarvinArbit 3 days ago

Agreed - so much so that houses struggle to sell.

I also think that there may be enough council housing, but it is poorly managed. Council housing shouldn't be for life, it should be to help deperate people get back on their feet. Once they have enough savings etc, they should be encouraged to move into private renatals or buy. Frreing up the council house for another homeless / desperate person.

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Posted by triguy96 3 days ago

There's not enough because if there were, then housing would be cheap enough to allow people who weren't desperate to move out of it. I think what you are describing would happen, and did happen, when there is enough social housing.

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Posted by ExtraGherkin 3 days ago

Wonder if we did build more housing how many landlords would leave the market.

I can see it now 'pushing down rent income will just make more landlords sell up to mega corps. This will hurt tenants'

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

> if we did build more housing how many landlords would leave the market.

Lots.

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Posted by Aeowalf 3 days ago

More rentals on the market = Lower rental prices

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Posted by Acrobatic-Rice-9373 3 days ago

Funded by the regime? Rent control was a sure gem to quality safe housing.

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Posted by HerewardHawarde 3 days ago

Corporate landlords vs private

aka

You're not going to be paying less

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Posted by DomTopNortherner 3 days ago

This is inevitable. It's agglomeration of capital. Feature of our political economy, not a bug.

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Posted by KimonoCathy 3 days ago

Whilst it is true that the same buildings will still exist, the usage generally differs between owner-occupied (typically a single family, even if only one person) and rented (far more likely to be shared between multiple adults, especially larger properties). So rental houses being turned into owner-occupation is likely to reduce the overall capacity available for renters even though the total number of properties is unchanged. London in particular is expected to see this happening.

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Posted by Maxxxmax 3 days ago

But how can that be? I was told it was SAFE AS HOUSES. Checkmate, market forces.

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Posted by Dependent_Phone_8941 3 days ago

Rental properties are lived in more densely than owner occupied properties. As in on average more people live in that house when it’s a rental.

When we have a problem with number of places to live, we don’t need to lower that number.

Yes it’s nicer to live in the property yourself, but as a population we live almost less densely than we ever have and we are seeing those problems in the market.

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Posted by TangeloExternal229 3 days ago

This is true, anecdotal but I knew a landlord who had a 7 bedroom hmo/bedsit setup. Refurbished and sold to a family. 7 people had to find new accommodation. Place wasn’t cheap either!

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Posted by Demeter_Crusher 3 days ago

I think unlikely... probably the best-off 1/3 of renters will buy and the less-well-off 2/3 will be lodgers, presumably with banks taking that extra income into account when lending. Good for the ones who get to own, more mixed for those who don't... there are advantages to living with your landlord but lodgers have almost no rights and there's the possibility of some ugly kinds of exploitation.

Existing HMOs will likely be less affected since they're already jumping through many regulatory hoops.

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

Income from lodgers isn't acknowledged by mortgage providers because it's not stable or consistent. Either renters can afford to buy and will buy or a bigger landlord will come along and buy the property.

Most people won't take lodgers I mean yes it's tax free money up to 7.5k but there is alot of hassle which most people don't want to deal with. Also when you finally own your own home do you really want to go back to the good old days of sharing? Being a landlord for lodgers takes a certain kind of person same with being a lodger. It's definitely not for everyone.

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Posted by Demeter_Crusher 3 days ago

Some lenders already will - and almost all offer buy-to-let mortgages for shared houses. So the product will be a buy-to-live-and-let mortgage, with a much larger pool of people looking to lodge to draw from.

But beyond that we're discussing a new paradigm. Shrinking private sector rented stock (assuming LL do exit due to a variety of factors) will drive current tenants somewhere - this seems like the seam that will give because it doesn't actually change anyone's personal circumstances much. No one on the street or back with their parents, for example.

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

If anything mortgage providers are becoming more risk adverse not less. We won't be seeing a product like that come on the market. Too many potential headaches. Not when there are plenty of cooperate landlord who can buy it instead. Mortgage providers generally have no issues giving constent to have lodgers but they definitely won't consider the income from it. Maybe you had the two things confused?

Private rental stock is shrinking https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2025-04-23/london-rents-surge-why-are-landlords-miserable?accessToken=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzb3VyY2UiOiJTdWJzY3JpYmVyR2lmdGVkQXJ0aWNsZSIsImlhdCI6MTc0NTM4NTY2OCwiZXhwIjoxNzQ1OTkwNDY4LCJhcnRpY2xlSWQiOiJTVjVLR1lEV1JHRzAwMCIsImJjb25uZWN0SWQiOiI0QjlGNDMwQjNENTk0MkRDQTZCOUQ5MzcxRkE0OTU1NiJ9.ISnifDBDmyhTryAX2U1ZruKO65ZncZuE_9c9RS_HugE&leadSource=reddit_wall

That puts some figures on it which gives a better view. I think it is already changing peoples circumstances. You might not notice it in your day to day life but I definitely know more people sofa surfing or living with their parents later in life because they can't find anywhere affordable.

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Posted by Demeter_Crusher 3 days ago

I mean here's one: https://www.bathbuildingsociety.co.uk/mortgages/browse-mortgages-by-product-type/rent-a-room/

But you're not wrong, the corporate landlord is one of the other ways this could work out.

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

That's a very small building society. I stand corrected that they exist. I still very much doubt they will become the norm though especially for bigger financial institutions. Also I can see it working for some areas. Less so for others. Lodgers have so few protections compared to tenents and many people just wouldn't want to be in such an unsecured position.

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Posted by Demeter_Crusher 3 days ago

I mean if your saying that corporate landlords smoothly replace private landlords but nothing really changes from a renters point of view then that could happen.

But if there's upheaval in the rental market as the article posits then there's going to be some upheaval. If we take the view of the whole housing market, then, there's basically the same number of people and the same number of houses, so, it's just a matter of how the pieces get shuffled around.

You mentioned people moving back with family, which can happen - but this describes a situation where those rented houses are now still bought by the best-off (eg) 1/3 of tenants, but for enough less money that they can afford them without lodgers - ie a bigger fall in house prices. Possible, but there'd be much resistance from homeowners to this.

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

>basically the same number of people and the same number of houses,

It's not though. Net immigration last year was what? 650k plus a not 0 or negative birth to death ratio. We only build 200k houses a year at most. Which is the biggest reason for the crisis atm. (BTW I'm not against immigration). The change to corporate landlords will be gradual though, it will only really start to bite when most rentals are with them. When they control the market they control what market rate is, they own all the properties and can easily black list someone so they can never rent privately again. They have so much money they can buy any house outright outbidding any potential home owners. Also they funnel all their profit offshore so pay minimal UK tax. They will squeeze as much money as possible out of it while letting it all rot and then get the tax payer to bail them out when everything is crumbling, just look at the water companies.

I think you are putting too much faith in changing to a lodgers system. I have lodgers. The extra money is lovely and makes a huge difference to our lives. But it is also painful in many ways and definitely not a long term thing for us. I can see that many people would never entertain the idea. I'd hate to be in a position where I was relying on lodgers to pay the mortgage. I think the stress would kill me.

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Posted by morewhitenoise 3 days ago

This logic is so short sighted and frankly idiotic.

The ratio is not 1:1. These properties do not just enter some majestic pool of freely available housing stock for renters.

Who owns the property now? What relationship will you have with them as a tenant?

Private landlords are a hell of a lot nicer to their tenants than a PE firm.

Yes some landlords are scumlord crims, but thats society as a whole.

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Posted by rationalplan10 3 days ago

Increasing regulation and more tax changes have been reducing the number of houses for rent for a decade now. The number of properties being sold by landlords has been higher than purchases since 2014. A government survey in December showed that 31% of landlords are planning to sell off at least some of their properties.

This is one of the reasons that rents have been rising so much, fewer properties available for rent for the same number of renters. As we build so few houses in this country sell offs can easily be absorbed by the owner occupier sector without affecting prices. It's not as if most private renter's have the deposit or income required to buy a property.

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Posted by runn5r 3 days ago

I wonder why they can’t buy a property… its a mystery

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Posted by Wondering_Electron 3 days ago

As a private landlord,

"Fine! I'll jack my prices because the market is going that way"

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Posted by Witty-Bus07 3 days ago

I don’t get the headline, are the landlords taking the houses with them and are no longer available?

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Posted by morewhitenoise 3 days ago

Rental properties are not energy. They can go out of supply and/or be destroyed.

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Posted by citrusman7 3 days ago

big companies will just buy up the small guys

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Posted by retrofauxhemian 3 days ago

First paragraph, a ban on biding wars, means we are just gonna ask higher rents anyway, and the article has the audacity to imply it's legislation that will reduce the supply of 'affordable housing' not the actors.

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Posted by Important_Coyote4970 2 days ago

Already happening.

It’s not good.

The UK needs a certain % of the housing market available for rent.

Not everyone can or wants to own all the time. Uber stupid decision making first from the Tories and now from Labour.

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Posted by Senior_Glove_9881 2 days ago

Anecdotal but my previous landlord literally said to me as soon as this was given a date to be enacted he would evict me. I've since bought a house.

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Posted by Alacrityneeded 3 days ago

A reduction in landlords isn’t necessarily a bad thing for everyone.

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Posted by iHateThisApp9868 3 days ago

Affordable ?

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Posted by the_speeding_train 3 days ago

Wait. Landlords were providing affordable housing?

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

Yes, otherwise the properties would be empty.

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Posted by the_speeding_train 3 days ago

Lol

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Posted by RagerRambo 3 days ago

"affordable" is subjective. Market rate is more accurate.

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Posted by the_speeding_train 3 days ago

Sounds suspect. One means someone can afford it. The other means, screw you if you can’t afford the ‘market’ which has been inflated by a number of predatory practices.

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Posted by RagerRambo 3 days ago

I'd like to live in a penthouse flat in the centre of London. I cannot "afford" it. Where should my anger be aimed?

Edit: another muppet that can't handle differing opinions and just blocks. Grow up

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Posted by the_speeding_train 3 days ago

I’m sure you can figure it out.

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

Some do. They keep rent at lha rates and may not increase it for years.

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Posted by Joohhe 3 days ago

Why keep thinking something which may not happen? I read a news said Tories landlord would stop the bills at the end.

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Posted by phpadam 3 days ago

Labour has a huge majority, Tories can do nothing but shout from the sideliness but remember this is a Tory bill anyway. Labour mainly just gave it a new name.

Change your news sources, they are weird.

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Posted by Joohhe 3 days ago

The bill now is in house of lords. They have power to stop the bills.

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Posted by Capitain_Collateral 3 days ago

What? Do the houses disappear or something?

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Posted by Ginor2000 3 days ago

And what’s going to happen to all these homes in order to reduce the supply?

Will they be dismantled and transported brick by brick to China?…

No. They will be sold to people who actually want to live in them. Or…to other landlords!

This is such a stupid belief, that landlords actually supply anything to the market. Other than their bank details.

Are we still this dumb?

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Posted by Acceptable-Store135 3 days ago

the landlords who are able to exit have exited, the pones who are still landlords are stuck. landlords that have bought years ago have much higher CGT, those recent landlords probably have luttle to no CGT because prices platued for the last 3 years

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Posted by sotonryan 3 days ago

Exactly what we need to stabilise price increases

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Posted by Busy_slime 3 days ago

I hope they break the "category"

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Posted by EstablishmentReal156 3 days ago

It will affect the housing market with a probable crash if substantial numbers of let properties go on sale. Word to the wise, the decision makers are well aware and will most likely be eyeing a discounted housing market.

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Posted by phpadam 2 days ago

The numbers are too low to have much effect on house prices.

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Posted by drgs100 2 days ago

There's a supply of affordable housing?

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Posted by monsieur_maladroit 2 days ago

Landlords don't provide housing the hoard it.

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Posted by Spuckuk 2 days ago

Sounds like a great change to the rules honestly. Parasites.

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Posted by Muchtenting96 3 days ago

In other news, water is wet

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Posted by AllTheWhoresOvMalta 3 days ago

Do houses cease to exist when a landlord sells them?

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Posted by Main_Bend459 3 days ago

No but most tenanted properties are more densely populated than owner occupied. Combine that with the population increasing far quicker than we are building and we will continue to have a housing shortage. Supply and demand says prices go up on every front.

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Posted by GreaterGoodIreland 3 days ago

...The houses aren't collapsing with them, they'll still be on the market.

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Posted by Palatine_Shaw 2 days ago

No it wont.

Landlords aren't going to stop their income because they have to give an extra months notice. Honestly the whining is just pathetic at this point. Whenever the most insubstantial amount of tenant rights happens they all just throw their toys out the pram and cry.

I'm still waiting for the big "exodus" the moment they Government stopped Landlords arbitrarily banning pets. Any day now right?

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Posted by phpadam 2 days ago

If you think they are complaining just about an extra month in arrears, you've not been listening.

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Posted by huckinfell2019 3 days ago

There will be no exodus. What else can landlords do for money? Insurance claim deniers?

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Posted by No_Ferret_5450 3 days ago

Dump the money in a low cost etf

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Posted by TrashbatLondon 3 days ago

An exodus of landlords who operate on margins tight enough to be concerned by the renters rights bills will result in more affordable housing, given that at least some of those houses will be bought for cheaper by people who will actually live in them.

There are currently simply too many landlords and not enough owner occupiers (particularly in younger demographics). Regulations that shift the balance to a more sustainable long term future are good.

Any good landlord should welcome these measures.

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Posted by AgentOrange131313 3 days ago

You’re right in saying what should happen, but the concern is that the houses will just get bought up by the big corpos and not the couple down the road

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Posted by Mwnci01 3 days ago

I'm a mortgage broker and one of my clients has 53 properties. All starter home type properties in the north of England. He has sold them all off to larger company investors. None have gone to personal ownership.

I can't imagine the new owners will keep rents as they are as the guy hadn't raised them for years.

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Posted by TrashbatLondon 3 days ago

Simply a case of priorities.

If you have two categories of business:

  1. has 4 trigger points that cause price increases

  2. has the same 4 trigger points that cause price increases, but also has one additional trigger.

The supply is limited, therefore the group who don’t have the extra price increase sensitivity are free to simply increase their margin when the other group get forced to increase prices. This is a race to the bottom.

There’s loads wrong with the first group as well, but there is a blatant issue that is easily fixed.

The idea that all the properties would simply get bought by the big companies doesn’t scan either. Big companies are already well capable of squeezing smaller landlords out with the flick of a pen. BTL mortgages are often used for properties which don’t come at scale. Those would certainly increase in owner occupancy were BTLs banned or disincentivised beyond viability.

Of course there is a more conspiratorial line of thinking, that big landlords benefit from the lobbying arguments that the existence of unsustainable small holdings bring. Or that the UKs mismanagement of the cost of living and the availability of retirement funds means there is a massive over reliance on property investment to fund an aging population. But neither of those things work as arguments against a current housing and homelessness crisis that requires urgent action.

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Posted by [deleted] 3 days ago

[deleted]

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Posted by plinkoplonka 3 days ago

Seems like a great idea to lump everyone into the same box.

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