EPCs for the PRS: Ed Miliband fires the starter gun for a landlord exodus

EPCs for the PRS: Ed Miliband fires the starter gun for a landlord exodus

9:36 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 4 hours ago 22

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Here we go again with energy performance certificate (EPC) ratings needing to be a minimum of C for the private rented sector but not homeowners, social housing or government buildings.

Ed Miliband was rather slovenly when sprawling over the despatch box to tell MPs that landlords will have a deadline of 2030 to meet. That’s a deadline after Labour gets voted out of office.

The big worry for me is that the EPC move will be riding on the coattails of a new Renters’ Rights Bill which will undermine and scare many landlords.

I’m also concerned that the people making the decisions don’t understand energy performance certificates.

If they did, they’d know they aren’t worth the paper they are printed on.

I fear though that we will be coerced into going down this route since BTL mortgage lenders offer the carrot of cheaper rates for those who meet the EPC criteria.

However, in all of this, no one ever appears to consider the plight of the tenants.

They will in effect – if Labour don’t bring in a rent cap – be paying for improvements with higher rents.

But what’s the payback for landlords? One year, two years, or more?

That’s a frightening prospect of not making a profit while the tenant enjoys higher rents and (slightly) cheaper fuel bills.

When campaigning, Miliband and Sir Kier said energy bills would drop by £300 a year – but they’ve been quiet on this number lately. And tenants won’t be saving £300 if the rent goes up by £1,500.

But there’s a bigger issue at stake that could put the skids under this plan.

Not only is Labour being shy about the £300 (and Angela Rayner’s vow to ban Section 21 evictions on ‘day one’), but they are also not talking about the energy price cap going up in the autumn and again January. That’s a double whammy hitting pensioners.

We can add that to the already ever-growing list of failed promises for a government that has had the shortest honeymoon period in political history.

I’m pretty sure those pensioners who won’t get the heating allowance will be dancing in the streets as their heating bill rockets.

Landlords would be happy to improve their property

Let’s face it, most landlords would be happy to improve their property if it was cost-effective and helped increase its value.

But reading Property118 on this issue highlights that the assessors have a lot to answer for by ‘assuming’ a lot of the answers. Usually, wrongly.

Different assessors find different ratings for the same property. Surely, the job can’t be that hard, can it?

Again, politicians of a left bent don’t appear to understand the private rented sector and the implications that come when imposing new rules and laws.

Especially when they cost money.

We are now looking at fed-up landlords who don’t want to upgrade or can’t afford to and have to decide what they should do next.

It also means carrying out the work in a void or putting the tenants up in a hotel. I doubt we’ll be able to evict to get an empty property.

We also need to find someone to do the work.

Good luck with that since all the builders will be busy delivering Angela Rayner’s promised 1.5 million new homes. As if!

It will be a faff organising an assessor, arguing about why it doesn’t reach a C and then being told – hopefully in writing – what needs to be done.

Then you’ll have to spend money on the work and STILL not be guaranteed a C rating.

The whole thing is bonkers.

Ed Miliband will get my support when social housing has to comply with the rules, but no one ever asks why they don’t.

And for those who will wait to see what the law will be, you could be leaving things very late and might get caught out.

Or you could carry out the work for the rule to be dropped Rishi-like when it’s convenient to do so.

How many landlords will sell up?

This brings me neatly to calculating how many landlords will sell up to avoid the C rating nonsense.

If it takes a few years to recoup the expenses, then why not dish out a section 21 notice to sell the property? [Editor’s note: This sentence has been corrected].

It might be a struggle in front of a judge, but older landlords can say they are selling up to retire and the property is their pension pot.

Younger landlords? Judges might not be so keen if there are lots of landlords doing this though I’d imagine that would be a news story.

What if it is a landlord with a leasehold property and the freeholder declines to carry out improvements?

The more I think of the potential issues, the more I think it’s just easier to bale out altogether.

It’s the lack of joined up thinking by politicians that makes me nervous.

The portrayal of landlords as being greedy and unkind to tenants isn’t going to improve soon.

It will get worse but because the good and kind landlords – that’s most of us, Ed – are already fed up, it needs action from Labour to keep us in the PRS.

To make our point we must either sell up as one body or fight the portrayal of landlords as tenant exploiters.

Politicians can’t dictate how we are portrayed with a caveat they aren’t pointing at all landlords, just the criminal ones.

That isn’t true because you could easily say we are a crucial and respected part of the housing sector. But you don’t.

You could say that landlords should be helped by the government and not victimised. But you don’t.

I’m sure that the sound of landlords marching out of the sector and reducing rented home supply might get your attention.

And if it does, you will portray us as selfish and greedy and leaving tenants homeless.

We can’t win. Things were bad under the Tories but my good goodness, Labour look set to plunge to a new low in playing the blame game.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Old Mrs Landlord

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11:21 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 2 hours ago

Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 02/08/2024 - 11:00Wish I could share your optimism that Labour will keep all the same exemptions and mitigations! I think you are making too many assumptions.

Anthony Hill

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11:23 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 2 hours ago

This is the politics of envy. The labour party are attacking working class people who have done well and earned a comfortable retirement. No cold weather payment? Force them to sell their few rental properties and confiscate any other assets they may have if they get dementia. I am not rich I dont avoid taxes so I cannot bribe or fund them so they steal everything I have earned throughout my working life. God bless Mr Starmer.

GlanACC

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11:36 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 2 hours ago

Just been round my estate , there are 18 two bedroom houses up for sale, at least 12 of them used to be rentals. Normally these would be snapped up, I will keep my eye on them

JaSam

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11:41 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 2 hours ago

Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 02/08/2024 - 11:00
They could just implement it so that it only applies to new tenancies.

Beaver

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11:42 AM, 2nd August 2024, About 2 hours ago

Reply to the comment left by Mark Cairns at 02/08/2024 - 10:12
As you say…the more small landlords exit the market the better it is for you…that’s because you get higher rents.

EPC level 3 for all landlords will lead to higher rents for tenants.

Brian MacDonald

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12:18 PM, 2nd August 2024, About 58 minutes ago

The main issue the the current EPC system it encourages the use of GCH as it is cheaper to run compared to Heat Pumps etc. Government needs to change the EPC system to reflect what they actual want people and landlords to do. Lower carbon emissions or have cheaper heating costs?

Old Mrs Landlord

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12:21 PM, 2nd August 2024, About 55 minutes ago

Reply to the comment left by GlanACC at 02/08/2024 - 11:36These are just the properties Labour, Shelter and Generation Rent accused landlords of "Hoovering up" and stealing from first-time buyers, so why aren't they snapping them up now there is no landlord competition? Interest rates are lower than they were when we bought our two bedroom houses. That myth revealed as the lie it always was. I don't know any would-be first time buyers prepared to put in all the work we did on bringing run-down olaces back to a condition where they would compete with the plentiful choice of similar rentals on offer at that time.

Blodwyn

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12:34 PM, 2nd August 2024, About 42 minutes ago

I am still astonished as to why Labour chose Ed over David Miliband or anyone, the local dustman. David or Andy Burnham for example or the dustman might well have won that election. Heaven help us ALL if Ed stays in post for any time?

Beaver

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12:51 PM, 2nd August 2024, About 25 minutes ago

Reply to the comment left by Brian MacDonald at 02/08/2024 - 12:18
The main issue is that the current EPC system doesn't produce anything meaningful. If it was meaningful then no labour or conservative government would have to be coming out with that all landlords must be at level C nonsense. That's because if you were obliged to have a meaningful EPC (one that was both meaningful to landlords and tenants) and that gave you an accurate assessment of both the climate emissions and the running cost of your property, then an EPC band A, B or C property would be worth more in rent in the PRS than a D, E or F property. I.e. the market would sort the problem out.

Mr Blueberry

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14:06 PM, 2nd August 2024, Less than a minute ago

The figures are a bit unclear on how many private landlords are leaving the sector - I'm hearing 2500 homes are being sold a month and not being retained as rental homes. However, the figure must be higher as 260,000 landlords have left the sector since 2016, which means over 32,500 rental homes evaporating annually. The introduction of the abolition of S21 and back-door landlord taxes will mean the existing 2708 homes leaving the sector per month may conservatively increase to 10,000 / month as landlords experience non-profitability and alternative better incomes at, say, 5% without the hassle of landlord management and costs.

When in office, Michael Gove was quoted as saying the government could not afford to build more than 30,000 homes annually, let alone 90,000 a year. Therefore Labour's promise of 1,500,000 during their term in office is highly unlikely, nigh impossible. Therefore, my question is, with migration into the UK running at around 1,000,000 per year, who is going to build the new homes, and how is it going to be paid for?

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