The average UK rent hits £1,000 for the first time

Steve Lumley·22 July 2021·4 min read

The average UK rent hits £1,000 for the first time

The average rent being paid by tenants in the UK has reached £1,000 per month for the first time, data reveals.

The research carried out by Homelet highlights that the average rent of £1,007 is now a record high for the UK.

That's an increase of 5.9% compared with last year, and 7% higher than the figure for June 2019.

The firm says that every UK region has delivered an annual rent price increase.

Homelet's chief executive, Andy Halstead, said that part of the reason is down to the coronavirus pandemic and the government taking steps to protect tenants - but not enough to protect landlords.

'Landlords being penalised with higher taxes'

He explained: "It is a continuation of what we have seen for many years, with landlords being penalised with higher taxes and growing complexity in obtaining possession of a property.

"Increased costs for landlords mean, in simple terms, increased costs for tenants.

"Some may be shocked to see the average rental UK price go over the £1,000 mark yet supply and demand will continue driving rents up for the rest of the year, and we will see more records being broken next year."

He added that with landlords leaving the sector, and the sales market being stimulated by the stamp duty holiday, means housing stock levels for renting will fall.

The managing director of Accommodation for Students, Simon Thompson, said: "The average monthly rent of £1,000 is a landmark figure for the UK's private rental sector.

"This will bring the affordability of rents into focus and there will undoubtedly be calls for the government to step in and help landlords and tenants."

Landlords enjoy BTL mortgage boost

Meanwhile, one online BTL mortgage broker says that great deals for landlords are on the rise.

The findings from Property Master reveal that landlords can access 41 buy to let mortgages with a record low rate of 1.5% - or less.

They found that one BTL lender is offering a mortgage at 1%, though this is for current customers.

The firm's chief executive, Angus Stewart, said that the ending of the stamp duty holiday in September and rents rising means many landlords will be looking to boost their portfolio.

He said: "Lenders, unsurprisingly, in the BTL mortgage market will want a slice of that business and the competition, in terms of the range of products and prices on offer, is hotting up."

However, Mr Stewart says that landlords should look beyond the headline price because some of the best deals will have a loan to value (LTV) of 60% or 65%.