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Displaying ROOF Blog articles tagged with Renting

Landlords lobby to ‘save the private rented sector’

10/03/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Private sector landlords are urging support from MPs to ‘save the future of renting’ to students and young professionals. Nurses, teachers and a generation of young workers could be hit by a government plan to prohibit areas of shared housing for groups of unrelated tenants. The legislation comes into force on 6 April when new powers will allow planning legislation to be used to control the renting of shared properties to people who are not families or related tenants. Alan Ward, chairman of the Residential Landlords Association, said: The government’s change to planning Use Classes Orders is bad not only for landlords but for the whole private rented sector, not to mention the local economies that have traditionally grown around existing areas of shared housing’.

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MoD faces criticism for 8000 empty homes

19/01/2024

Author:
Renata Watson

Almost 8000 homes for Armed Forces families are standing empty despite the Ministry of Defence spending £17m a year renting substitute properties. Figures showed there are currently 7889 unoccupied homes for service families in the UK, including 2077 that have been empty for more than a year. But the MoD has spent more than £88m since 2004 on renting homes where no suitable properties are available, with the bill for 2009 topping £17m. Liberal Democrat defence spokesman, Willie Rennie, who uncovered the figures, said: ‘It is scandalous that the Government is spending millions renting forces homes despite already having thousands of houses standing empty.’

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It’s time to give up the dream of home ownership, says minister

11/12/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

The era in which all Britons aspire to own their own home may be coming to an end, according to the Housing minister, John Healey.

In a controversial speech, he suggested that Britain may be moving towards a European model, with renting on a roughly equal footing with buying.

He said home ownership had fallen from 71 per cent of households in 2003 to 68 per cent today, noting that this trend began in 2005, well before the recession.

A new model with greater flexibility is needed, he argued, allowing people to change from buying to renting without moving home.

‘Not all or nothing, but a flexible system which suits the different stages in people’s lives,’ he said.

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Calls to raise threshold on letting spare rooms

30/11/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

The Chancellor should double the tax relief on income made from renting out a spare room when he delivers his pre-Budget report on 9 December, according to the National Landlords Association.

The NLA hopes that Alistair Darling can be persuaded to raise the tax-free ‘rent-a-room’ threshold from its current level of only £4,250 – a level it has remained at since being introduced in 1997.

Since that time, rents have more than doubled in most parts of the country, shrinking the value of the original income threshold.

The NLA is one of several organisations supporting the Raise the Roof campaign, which is lobbying for an increase to £9,000 per year.

‘Raising the tax-free threshold for live-in landlords would provide an important boost to homeowners who are facing difficulties meeting their mortgage payments,’ said Chris Norris, NLA policy manager.

‘For many, the extra rental income really could mean the difference between paying the mortgage and losing their home.’

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Is home ownership the way out of poverty?

27/11/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

Opinion is divided over whether buying or renting is the better housing policy.

Centre for Social Justice Executive director Philippa Stroud argues that property ownership is still one of the best defences against poverty.

Royal Society for the Arts chief executive Matthew Taylor counters that home ownership has increased social inequality in terms of the life chances and assets of people who own their own homes, arguing instead that we should foster a massive expansion in the private rental sector and improve the quality of the houses on offer.

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Shelter calls for renters’ tax break

05/11/2023

Author:
Renata Watson

Shelter is calling for greater tax breaks for householders who rent a room to lodgers, because the tax threshold – the amount a person can receive in income before paying tax – is so low it puts people off from offering a room to potential renters.

The present threshold of £4,250 hasn’t changed since it was set in 1997, despite rent rises of more than 110 per cent since then.

But Shelter believes many more homeowners, especially those struggling with mortgage costs, would rent out a room if they didn’t have to worry about tax repercussions.

Shelter director of policy and campaigns Kay Boycott said:

‘In the current economic climate, many homeowners are battling to meet their mortgage payments and many are looking for options to maximise their income.

‘If the rent-a-room threshold was higher and the scheme better publicised, it could prove a real incentive for people to take in a lodger, and the take up of rent-a-room opportunities could increase.’

Shelter is calling for the threshold to be raised to £9,000 a year to reflect rising rents, which would cost the Treasury around £5 million per annum, plus a publicity drive to ensure greater take up of the scheme.

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