More landlords selling their properties

The number of landlords exiting the market rose to five per branch, up from four in March. ARLA Properymark said the reason for landlords leaving is the upcoming Tenant Fees Act and the proposed scrapping of Section 21 evictions.

More landlords selling their properties

In April, letting agents saw the highest number of landlords selling their buy-to-let properties since May 2018, ARLA Propertymark’s April Private Rented Sector has found.

The number of landlords exiting the market rose to five per branch, up from four in March. ARLA Properymark said the reason for landlords leaving is the upcoming Tenant Fees Act and the proposed scrapping of Section 21 evictions.

David Cox, ARLA Propertymark chief executive, said: “As predicted, April’s findings have shown an upsurge in the number of landlords selling their buy-to-let properties.

“In just a few days’ time, on the 1 June, the Tenant Fees Act will come into force in England. This, coupled with the proposed scrapping of Section 21, is forcing landlords to either increase rents or leave the market altogether.

“As supply of rental accommodation falls further, tenants will only be faced with more competition for properties, pushing up rent prices on good-quality, well-managed properties and decreasing tenants’ ability to negotiate rent reductions.

“In order to remain profitable, landlords will increase rents to cover the additional fees they are now faced with and as a result, tenants will continue to feel the burn.”

The number of tenants experiencing rent rises increased in April, with 33% of agents witnessing landlords increasing them, up from 30% in March.

Year-on-year, this figure is up from 24% in April 2017, and 26% in April 2018.

In April, the number of tenants successfully negotiating rent reductions fell from 2.9% in March to 1.9% in April, the lowest figure seen since May 2016 when it stood at the same.

The number of properties available to rent dropped marginally to 202 per member branch in April, from 203 in March, which was the highest since records began in 2015.

Year-on-year, supply is up 13%, from 179 per branch in April 2018.

Demand from prospective tenants also decreased in April, with the number of house hunters registered per branch falling to 64 on average, compared to 67 in March.