Landlord Action reports eviction instructions up 43% versus pre-pandemic

Landlord Action reports eviction instructions up 43% versus pre-pandemic

13:17 PM, 28th September 2021, About 3 years ago 2

Text Size

Landlord Action, one of the UK’s best-known eviction and housing law specialists, has seen a 43% rise in instructions from landlords and letting agents between 1 June 2021, when the eviction ban ended, and 1 September 2021, versus the same period in 2019, before the pandemic.

The company has also seen a 17% rise in enquiries to their landlord advice line during this time, receiving nearly 2,000 calls in just three months.  With the period of notice landlords must serve to tenants brought back to pre-pandemic timescales from 1 October (two months for Section 21 and two weeks for Section 8), Landlord Action anticipates a continued surge in enquiries, but warns review hearings at county courts are still causing long delays to the eviction process.

According to Landlord Action, the majority of their enquiries (approximately 90%) are from landlords wanting clarification on the latest legislation, looking to evict tenants for non-payment of rent or expressing a desire to sell up and exit the buy to let market. “Many landlords who speak to us express their concerns over non-payment of rent and the continual changing of the process which is now costing them more than they bargained for. The change back to pre-pandemic notice periods cannot come soon enough but we are having to warn landlords about delays in gaining possession due to the requirement for review hearings and a backlog of cases” says Paul Shamplina, founder of Landlord Action.

Review hearings were introduced last year to help courts prioritise the most urgent eviction cases and determine which should proceed to a substantive hearing at a later date. Despite the additional administration, it was anticipated that in some cases a settlement might be reached at review hearing stage, which would prevent the case having to go to court. However, Landlord Action says of approximately 400 review hearings, they are only aware of one case that has received a possession order straight after a review hearing.

Commenting on recent examples, Paul Sowerbutts, head of legal for Landlord Action said: “We are dealing with a possession case involving £14,000 which was issued to Wandsworth County Court in May 2021 and the review hearing is only scheduled for October 2021, five months later.  We expect it to progress to a substantive hearing which now will most likely not be until next year.  These delays will just continue to add to the debt owed by the tenant.

“In another case, which was due to be heard on Monday 6 September at Medway County Court, we were informed on Friday 3 September that due to a lack of judicial time, the hearing could not go ahead and there was no availability to move the case to another judge. We were asked for dates to avoid in the next 12 months suggesting that is how long it could be delayed for.”

The changing legislation, which before 1 October 2021  required landlords to provide proof of significant rent arrears in order to avoid a lengthy wait to serve notice, means there has been a shift in the type of notice landlords serve. Landlord Action says since June, 65% of notices served have been Section 8 (the vast majority relating to rent arrears) and 35% have been Section 21, no fault.

Historically, a Section 21 notice was the quickest way to gain possession.  Even though, in many cases, landlords forfeited their right to recoup lost rent (as this can only be achieved by using a Section 8 notice), most landlords accepted this was the quickest way to get their property back. Now we are seeing delays across the board, there is negativity by many landlords as to their future plans in the private rented sector” concludes Paul Shamplina.

Contact Landlord Action

Specialists in tenant eviction and debt collection. Regulated by The Law Society.


Share This Article


Comments

Chris @ Possession Friend

Become a Member

If you login or become a member you can view this members profile, comments, posts and send them messages!

Sign Up

14:49 PM, 29th September 2021, About 3 years ago

Look at Corona Virus support for Landlords and Tenants published by House of Commons library, Wendy Wilson 26/9/21 Page 34 para 3.1 Possession has decreased from 2019 by 75 – 80 % !

https://commonslibrary.parliament.uk/research-briefings/cbp-8867/

Mick Roberts

Become a Member

If you login or become a member you can view this members profile, comments, posts and send them messages!

Sign Up

15:28 PM, 8th October 2021, About 3 years ago

Excuse my delay, I've been away. Magaluf in Covid times-Just saying Like. Hope it rained in the UK cause it did where I was.
BikeMagalufThurs30Sep2021
https://photos.app.goo.gl/abFefek1z57mfhot9

Yes, the phone calls I'm getting from Landlord mates who are struggling. One asked me yesterday to do him a Section 21. I said I can't any more, they changing all the time, got to be Govt approved one now.

Another one today court for Anti Social Behaviour, Judge said Ooh u got rent arrears too. My mate said Yeah I'm not going for that, as the eviction ban etc. Judge said that's finished now, we need a day hearing for this. Adjourned till Nov. He's now got another bill to take to next court date for £500+.

Of course, all these cases are helping the current tenant, but making it much MUCH worse for the next 10,000 tenants waiting.

Leave Comments

In order to post comments you will need to Sign In or Sign Up for a FREE Membership

or

Don't have an account? Sign Up

Landlord Automated Assistant Read More