My landlord vision for Christmas 2025 – it’s not good for tenants

My landlord vision for Christmas 2025 – it’s not good for tenants

8:26 AM, 31st January 2025, About 2 hours ago 7

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It’s been six months since the Renters’ Rights Bill hit the statute books and the dust still hasn’t settled.

Tenants are outraged at the government’s meddling and can’t believe that evictions haven’t ended.

That’s despite reassurances from the naïve crowd in Labour that Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions are the ‘leading cause of homelessness’.

But we’ve since found out that wasn’t the case.

Rent arrears, anti-social behaviour and fed-up landlords bailing out of the PRS are the reasons why renters were being evicted.

Who knew?

Promise of tenant empowerment

There’s little festive cheer for the UK’s landlords after the promise of tenant empowerment has morphed into a harsh autumn of a growing PRS disaster, and frankly, it’s not a pretty sight.

My crystal ball has been working overtime to paint this bleak picture:

  • The housing crisis deepens: The promised 1.5 million new homes? Still a pipe dream. Meanwhile, the landlord exodus we predicted has become a reality, drastically shrinking the supply of rental properties. Tenants, now clinging to their rented homes like life rafts, are staying put for longer, not out of choice, but necessity. The inevitable result? Rents have rocketed as landlords opt to price high to avert any legal challenge of creating a bidding war. This move disproportionately impacts those on benefits or low wages – the very people Labour claims to champion
  • Periodic tenancies: The introduction of periodic tenancies has wreaked havoc on the student accommodation sector, as predicted. Student landlords take fright at the prospect of students handing their notice in after Christmas to live with parents and save cash. Overseas students face a near-impossible hurdle since they can’t pass stricter tenant checks without a UK presence, and with landlords understandably wary of accepting illegal advance rent payments, they’re left stranded. Potentially, universities could help but they don’t have the accommodation levels (thanks to years of over expansion…)
  • Notice periods: The much-lauded ability for tenants to give two months’ notice from day one, while landlords remain bound by longer notice periods, has created a power imbalance. Despite the Bill having the aim of levelling up the playing field, landlords now face extended void periods and the recurring costs of finding new tenants. Grounds for possession under Section 8, requiring a year’s occupancy, further tie landlords’ hands. To me, this is no longer an investment strategy; it’s indentured servitude
  • Selective licensing goes wild: Councils, emboldened by the Labour decision to remove the Secretary of State’s permission before creating a scheme have unleashed a torrent of selective licensing scams, I mean schemes, adding another layer of red tape and cost for landlords – though it’s tenants picking up the bill
  • Arrears and the Courts: The extended period before rent arrears become actionable, coupled with the chronically overburdened court system, has created a perfect (predictable) storm. Tenants can effectively enjoy a rent-free period for months, potentially years, while landlords are left powerless. Lefty judges and solicitors don’t help the situation
  • Guarantors: The restrictions on accepting guarantors adds another layer of risk, particularly for younger tenants. It appears that only landlords should be put at a potential financial disadvantage
  • EPCs: Labour continues doubling down on the EPC C rating by 2030 despite the whole Net Zero nonsense harming the economy and putting us at a disadvantage with leading economies. There’s still no sign that this much needed measure to deliver ‘warm and comfortable’ homes will extend to the social housing sector. It’s just another nail in the coffin for landlords, driving even more out of the market.

Evidence of a landlord exodus

Housing minister Matthew Pennycook and his cronies still deny there’s evidence of a landlord exodus, but more are leaving than investing. They bury their heads in the sand and deny the damage, but the reality is clear.

The Renters’ Rights Bill, far from being a panacea, has exacerbated the very problems it purported to solve. Even the government’s late pitch to impose rent caps doesn’t play well – everyone can now see why rents are rising. It isn’t landlord greed.

For landlords, Christmas 2025 is a stark reminder of well-intentioned, but ultimately misguided, legislation.

It’s a time for reflection, and perhaps, a strategic rethink.

The PRS landscape has undoubtedly changed with both tenants and landlords losing out.

The scenario was inevitable but it’s way worse than landlords could have foreseen and there’s no sign of a U-turn since the Labour clown show government is too busy fighting the fires it started: there’s no economic growth, immigration spirals out of control, overtaxed businesses are still laying off, incomes and living standards plummet – basically, it’s January 2025 on steroids.

We’re back to the problem of unintended consequences – that is if you ignore the expertise of landlords who have been vilified and who are too beaten to say, ‘We told you this would happen’.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Dylan Morris

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9:23 AM, 31st January 2025, About An hour ago

And there’s not even any short term accommodation as all the hotels are full of male doctors, nurses and software engineers.

Ross Tulloch

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9:24 AM, 31st January 2025, About An hour ago

No fault, evictions are misnamed. There is almost always somebody at fault. Except in the rare occasions when somebody wants a property back to sell or to live themselves there is always somebody at fault. My evictions have only been through nonpayment of rent or being forced to sell because of endless legislation which is anti-landlord and tenant. For instance the removal of being able to charge your costs (interest) or because local authorities are putting arbitrary minimum room sizes in on top of the silly country minimum room size in HMOs. So that is the fault of the local authority or the government directly and specifically.
The legislation seems to think there is endless supply that is not good. The actual problem is that there is simply not enough supply but everything seems to be being done to reduce the supply further. No fault evictions are entirely misnamed.

Chris

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10:03 AM, 31st January 2025, About 37 minutes ago

There is no "mass exodus" of landlords, of course that depends on how you define exodus, but there are not thousands selling every day but there most certainly has been a steady exiting by landlords for many reasons but legislation being the biggest driver. Simple maths proves this and thus the losers are our tenants because there is less supply therefore they will accept anything to call a home which allows the unscrupulous landlords to cash in on those tenants forced out of the mainstream market by ill thought out legalisation.

David Houghton

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10:14 AM, 31st January 2025, About 26 minutes ago

Exactly, very few available rentals out there.I get a lot of texts from ex tenants. Have you got anything. So when someone does go at least I won't have to advertise, and I can increase the rent for the new people. Usually a quiet tenant doesn't get a rent increase, but they stay much longer now, and inflation annual rises will be written in to the tenancy. So it's just retire 5 or 10 years earlier for us. Really bad for tenants

Northern Observer

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10:26 AM, 31st January 2025, About 15 minutes ago

Reply to the comment left by Ross Tulloch at 31/01/2025 - 09:24
If they want a catch phrase closer to the point (which they won’t as it doesn’t fit the narrative), they should use S21 no reason given Notice. Once these are converted to S8 then they will have their reasons and it won’t be to put up the rent (as they claim). The majority will be to sell.

John Nyari

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10:38 AM, 31st January 2025, About 3 minutes ago

Exodus is melodramatic. I imagine many landlords will be similar to myself selling properties as and when they become vacant (as long as they can afford to do this). I have sold 2 HMOs and selling a third (as rooms were vacated) and I have several flats with long term tenants. So I would not evict everyone and sell but simply await the opportunity. So I predict a steady but solid decline and it may even take years.
I know nostalgia is not what it used to be but does anyone remember 15-20 years ago when the rental market war brimming. There was so many landlords and therefore lots of choice for tenants because landlords were competing. This occurred because it was largely unregulated but it wasn't the wild west. I don't have to tell readers here of the swathes of red tape (and threats of fines) for non compliance that we now have. I genuinely enjoyed being a landlord back then ...

Cider Drinker

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10:38 AM, 31st January 2025, About 2 minutes ago

The RRB hasn’t “hit the statute books’.

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