Saw this article today and have put part of it below, in answer to those that believe landlords are just greedy.
“NRLA chief executive Ben Beadle We are already seeing a shrinking private rented sector – 260,000 homes have left the sector in the last five years, and look at what we are seeing: costs increase across the board, demand massively outstripping supply, yet rents are rising 3.2%, a rate lower than the social sector which was 4.1% in April.
Ian Maitland, president of the South West Landlords’ Association added that the people who drew up the legislation were clearly unfamiliar with the standard of build in areas such as the West Country.
“Some of their properties are horrendous and you will never get them to an EPC of D, never mind a C. Cornwall is a really good example. There is a dire shortage of housing, and they still can’t bring them up to a C.
“Does the local authority stamp on them and stop them letting them, so increasing the homelessness level? That’s the council saying that, not us. It’s not been well thought out.”
Mr Maitland said he had taken advantage of the Covid-era Green Homes grant, and applied external cladding to some of his terraced Victorian properties in Plymouth, at a cost of around £18,000-£20,000 per building.
Yet despite the new cladding, together with double-glazing and central heating, they still don’t meet a EPC rating of C.”
So as I have mentioned, shortly, unless the Government changes the legislation this country will see many people thrown onto the street, since the homes they are currently living in simply cannot be brought up to this C rating standard.
Things are not always as they first appear. In the meantime many landlords in this vacuum of policy and direction are selling up, reducing the number of rental properties, hence increasing the rents through reduced competition.
The new PM has indicated she believes private landlords have been treated unfairly by previous Governments and wants to create a less hostile environment. Let’s hope she does something quickly.