0:05 AM, 9th October 2024, About 2 months ago 12
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Renters in England are facing an average cost of £2,216 for unwanted house moves following eviction, according to research from Generation Rent.
This ‘eviction tax’ includes costs such as the deposit, ‘overlapping’ rent from old and new tenancies, and other moving expenses.
As MPs debate the Renters’ Rights Bill in the Commons today, the organisation wants the law to stipulate that landlords waive the last two months’ rent.
It says the average rent in England is £1,327, meaning two month’s compensation would cover the ‘eviction tax’ costs.
Generation Rent’s chief executive, Ben Twomey, said: “£2,216 is an astonishing amount of money to have to stump up for a move you didn’t choose to make.
“Along with the inconvenience of being uprooted and having to find a new home, you can play by the rules but still rack up thousands of pounds of debt when the landlord decides to kick you out.”
He added: “The cost of renting crisis continues to cut deep, and these enormous moving costs can be the difference between renters finding a new home or finding themselves out on the streets.
“The government must use the opportunity of the Renters’ Rights Bill to compensate evicted renters by making landlords waive the last two months’ rent, so we have the breathing space to make the savings we need to keep a roof over our heads.”
While the Bill will abolish the Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions, it will still allow landlords to evict when selling a property or moving back in themselves.
The Renters’ Reform Coalition (RRC) is calling on the government to introduce two months’ rent compensation for tenants evicted under these grounds.
It says that compensation would help mitigate the financial hardship faced by renters who are forced to move out of their homes.
The RRC argues that having to pay compensation in the case of a no-fault, landlord-need eviction would reduce the number of evictions that result in homelessness.
It would also discourage landlords from trying to ‘abuse’ the new eviction grounds as a ‘backdoor’ to the banned Section 21 process, the RRC warns.
Tom Darling, a director of the Renters’ Reform Coalition, said: “It’s totally unjust that a renter can be evicted through absolutely no fault of their own and have to meet costs of more than two grand – this is just another factor in our broken renting system which contributes to homelessness and poverty.
“We welcome the government’s Renters’’ Rights Bill – the end of section 21 will mean greater security for millions of renters across England.”
He adds: “But let’s be clear: no-fault evictions will continue.
“That’s why we’re calling on the government to go further and protect tenants against the ‘eviction tax’ through two months’ rent as compensation.”
The organisations are also urging MPs to pay attention to their other proposals, such as:
Disillusioned Landlord
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Sign Up23:48 PM, 9th October 2024, About 2 months ago
This is absolute madness, Generation Rent have no comprehension what they are doing, just reading this makes me want to sell up. I do hope they have a plan for that, because I’m sure I’m not the only landlord thinking it’s no longer worth it when people like this have clearly lost the plot.
Disgrunteld Landlady
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Sign Up14:49 PM, 17th October 2024, About 2 months ago
Firstly who is this guy, is he still living with his parents? Sure looks like he is.
Where I live all tenancies are 2 years mostly with a 1y break clause so minimum of 14 months before either side can break it. Deposits is 2 months down and 1 month in advance. so 3 months - minimum would be about 5k sterling!. Fees are half a month from both sides to the Agent. After this no managing agents as they are simply not needed. You sign, pay the rent and that's that. So actually a 6 month AST is really short and if people have to move after this its difficult as it is bad for the landlords who have to clear up all the mess and dirt and fix the damage after 6 months. I had to move out in Australia after 1year as the owner wanted the property back and it was a huge upheaval. But the problem in UK is often poor tenants who I hope are finding it harder to rent as we are all becoming way more careful. When I list out the right to rent, credit, ref employer, right to live in UK list a lot of interested tenants just disappear.