All-inclusive tenants WILL get £400 energy bill rebate

All-inclusive tenants WILL get £400 energy bill rebate

8:01 AM, 22nd September 2022, About 2 years ago 18

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Landlords will have to pass on a £400 energy rebate to their tenants who are paying rent with their bills included, the government has revealed.

The move is part of the government’s help to deal with soaring energy bills and various charities have voiced concerns that for renters who have energy bills included in their rent would miss out because the energy rebate will be paid to the landlord.

Now, the government says it is prepared to force through legislation that will compel landlords to pass on the energy rebate to their tenants.

Energy bill rebate for all-inclusive tenants

The Government announcement on the energy bill rebate for all-inclusive tenants, states:

Your landlord may charge an ‘all inclusive’ rent, where a fixed cost for energy usage is included in your rental charges, in which case:

  • they are encouraged to come to an agreement with you on the discount in line with the arrangement in your tenancy agreement
  • the landlord’s fixed charge may already provide you with similar protection from the impact of the energy price increase.

‘Relieved to see the government bring in measures’

Charities have welcomed the news with Gillian Cooper, the head of energy policy for Citizens Advice, saying: “We’re relieved to see the government bring in measures to make sure people don’t miss out on money they’re entitled to.

“But it’s still shaping up to be an incredibly difficult winter and the government must be ready to provide more support for families struggling the most.”

Responding to news that the Government plans to legislate to ensure landlords pass on the Energy Bills Support Scheme discount to tenants paying all-inclusive rents, Chris Norris, the policy director for the National Residential Landlords Association, said: “Given payments under the support scheme have not begun to be made, the Government’s plans to legislate are premature and are demonising landlords unnecessarily.

“It sends a dangerous and misleading message that landlords cannot be trusted to do the right thing, creating needless fear and anxiety for tenants.”

‘Benefits system is systematically failing to protect the most vulnerable’

He added: “The reality is that one-off pots of money like this cannot compensate for the fact that the benefits system is systematically failing to protect the most vulnerable tenants.

“At a time when households finances are being squeezed it makes no sense to have frozen housing benefit rates.”

The NRLA says it is also calling for a long-term plan to help landlords introduce energy efficiency measures.

However, it’s unlikely that any legislation will be passed before October, because Parliament will be in recess from Friday for the Conservative and Labour party conferences.

Whether the energy rebate will be delayed

It’s still unclear whether the energy rebate will be delayed being passed on to tenants without legislation.

The announcement comes as the government has announced its energy support package to help businesses around the country in a move that will see their bills being cut by half from their predicted winter levels – this move will also require legislation.

Now, the scheme will see electricity and gas prices being fixed for businesses from 1 October for six months.

The savings will, the government says, be seen in business’s October energy bills – when they are received in November.

The Prime Minister, Liz truss, announced earlier this month government plans to limit energy bill increases for up to two years for all households.

This will see a typical household energy bill being capped at £2,500.


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Mark C

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16:09 PM, 24th September 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Alistair Cooper at 22/09/2022 - 14:59
Alistair, I feel your pain. We are in the same situation with our HMO's, numbers about the same. You can be sure that some of the tenants will see this and think they deserve a reduction not realising that they have already been shielded from the increases.
I am putting rents up unfortunately as I do not want to shoulder the additional £6-7k per property on my own.

David Judd

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16:25 PM, 24th September 2022, About 2 years ago

The Conservatives are having a knee jerk reaction. This obviously doesn't make any sense, but neither did anything else in that mini budget. Younger people will be paying for these mistake for years to come. Its not trickle down, its delaying a massive debt repayment - and someone has to pay for it

user_ 52606

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14:40 PM, 3rd October 2022, About 2 years ago

Obfuscated Data

Di Driscoll

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22:56 PM, 14th October 2022, About 2 years ago

I'm tired of landlords being considered as inconsiderate and getting walked all over. I have 3 out of 4 tenants working from home all the time on their high powered machines with double monitors, not hard up in any way. The rent they pay with bills included was calculated prior to the current hikes. It is about the same as the students next door pay - but the students are having to pay bills on top and we pay council tax and cleaner too.

Jay

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5:12 AM, 15th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Thank you for your comments Andrew they are very helpfully. I think as you say it is about getting the tenants on side and understanding the circumstances, I believe we have done this. However, it is another worry that any tenant could decide for whatever reason they are not going to contribute.You are not the only person that has said this to me.

It is a concern not just from the point of view of affordability for us, but how this would make other house sharers feel at the property and keeping unity in the house/s.

Your are right this is indeed a flaw in the all inclusive model. As there are in many areas of property it seems. The government unfortunately seem to be making it less and less attractive for landlords. Perhaps, there will come a time when they make it more attractive again, after they realise the damage they have done to the market.

Don

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16:37 PM, 15th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Are HMO properties covered by the residential price cap?

Andrew Miller

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17:31 PM, 15th October 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by Don at 15/10/2022 - 16:37
Yes Don, assuming they are on a residential supply.

Tony Clements

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15:30 PM, 10th December 2022, About 2 years ago

Reply to the comment left by John Grefe at 22/09/2022 - 15:23
Unless the lamdlord increases the rent the tenant is still paying £1800. Why would they be entitled to the rebate? As an HMO landlord we have not yet raised rents but when the Jan and Apr rise comes it's inevitable.

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