11:52 AM, 17th July 2024, About 4 months ago 26
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A new law that will ban Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions will be introduced, along with legislation to ‘give greater rights and protections’ to tenants, the King’s Speech revealed.
Speaking at the opening of Parliament, King Charles revealed the legislative process of the new Labour government.
He also announced that there will also be legislation for leasehold and commonhold reform.
The speech also revealed that Labour ‘will get Britain building’ to ‘accelerate’ the delivery of ‘high-quality infrastructure and housing’.
That includes a manifesto promise to build 1.5m new homes over the next five years.
Chris Norris, the National Residential Landlords Association’s policy director, said: “With an average of 15 households chasing every available home to rent, it is vital that rental reform does not make an already serious supply crisis in the private rented sector worse.
“The system that replaces Section 21 needs to be fair, workable and sustainable for both responsible landlords and renters.
“That means fixing a broken justice system which too often fails those reliant upon it.”
He added: “The Housing Minister has rightly noted that landlords need the courts to operate quickly where they have a good reason to repossess a property.
“This includes cases of tenant anti-social behaviour and serious rent arrears, which currently take almost seven months to process. This is far too long.
“Tenants are no better served by delays, which increase hardship, stress, and uncertainty.
“We need action from the Government, alongside the Bill, to ensure all are able to access justice in a timely fashion when they need to do so.
“We will work constructively with the Government as it continues to work on the detail of its plans.”
Ben Twomey, the chief executive of Generation Rent, said: “It is welcome to see the end to no-fault evictions included in the government’s plans.
“After five years of promises from the previous government, with no improvements at the end of it, renters are understandably demoralised and wary of new commitments.
“The government faces a big test to reassure voters that it can quickly turn promises into action and change things for the better.”
He added: “These reforms must therefore go further than the previous government planned, with real support for tenants whose landlord wants to sell or move back in to prevent homelessness.
“This includes more time to enjoy our homes without fearing eviction, and more notice and financial support if this happens.
“Similarly, empowering tenants to challenge rent increases won’t work if we still end up with rents rising faster than our incomes.”
Oli Sherlock, the managing director of insurance at Goodlord, said: “With the government confirming plans to scrap Section 21 as part of a Renters’ Rights Bill, there is only a short window of time in which to address the one area that could make or break the success of the new legislation: the courts.
“We must unclog the court backlog.
“The legal system is fraying at the seams and cannot cope even with current level of claims.”
He added: “There’s no value in scrapping Section 21 if the court system can’t handle the influx of demand, it will inevitably unlock.
“We need a plan, with timelines, on how the legal system will cope.”
Lauren Hughes, the head of customer success at Vouch, said: “I’m sure the whole sector is delighted with the government’s ambitious plans to ‘turbocharge’ the building of new homes.
“The only route to re-stabilising the housing sector is building more high-quality homes – this will get more supply into the rental market, take pressure off tenants, and create new investment opportunities for landlords.
“But houses aren’t created overnight, so we need to get shovels in the ground as quickly as possible if we want to see the impact within a reasonable timeframe.”
Adam Jennings, the head of lettings at Chestertons, said: “Labour promised to scrap Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions on day one of the new government and fulfilled this promise today.
“After the Renters (Reform) Bill was abandoned when a snap General Election was called, tenants were left in the dark about their future rights, so today’s announcement brings some relief and clarity.”
He adds: “Particularly in London, a city with one of the world’s most competitive rental markets, tenants will likely appreciate Labour’s move to improve tenant rights.
“It’s worth noting, however, that Labour’s announcement comes during the busiest season for the lettings market and could lead to an additional boost in tenant demand.”
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Richard
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Sign Up20:47 PM, 17th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Gareth Davies at 17/07/2024 - 20:16
Yes, but there are also no houses to rent, even though rents have increased massively under the new system. I've sold mine and gone!
Bristol Landlord
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Sign Up20:53 PM, 17th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Reply to the comment left by PAUL BARTLETT at 17/07/2024 - 20:19Agreed Paul, I believe the intent is to hand the entire sector over to the corporations who will provide Govt ministers with seats on the Board, "consultancy" jobs, speaking engagements, luxury overseas holidays etc.
Rupert Rigsby would never be able to provide that.
The prime example is George Osborne after his 2015 Budget which caused much damage to private landlords, but favoured corporations regarding S24 interest payment tax allowances and created a very unlevel playing field, left his Govt gig and was later hired by Blackrock as an "advisor"..... really, an advisor!!!
havens havens
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Sign Up21:15 PM, 17th July 2024, About 4 months ago
I think banning Section 21 evictions can make renting more stable for tenants, which is good. But we need to fix court delays and make sure both landlords and tenants get fair treatment during changes and it is also important to build more homes quickly to ease the housing shortage. Getting these things right will be crucial for a fair rental market that works well for everyone.
LaLo
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Sign Up23:58 PM, 17th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Our new prime minister says section 21 will be scrapped with ‘immediate effect’ ! How can this be so?
Jason
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Sign Up12:47 PM, 18th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Reply to the comment left by PAUL BARTLETT at 17/07/2024 - 20:14
No idea, emergency legislation? Ask AR as she’s the one saying she would ban it on day one. There is still time only 11hours to go lol.
Phil T
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Sign Up23:24 PM, 18th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Why is anyone still hanging on to their property. Get them sold and avoid all the hassle and unfair taxation. Get the money invested and take a hassle free dividend. There won't be much property left to rent, but that's the government's problem as it seems to be what they want
Downsize Government
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Sign Up8:02 AM, 20th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Richard at 17/07/2024 - 20:45
What if interest rates drop to near 0 again?
Retired GasMan
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Sign Up8:15 AM, 20th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 17/07/2024 - 13:46Same here, we've never issued a notice for ANY of our long term tenants.
We had holiday lets but did the opposite, we turned them into ASTs'. Main reason being is our local authority are always looking at caning the holiday let owners so we got out, glad we did, the writing is on the wall for holiday lets.
city boy
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Sign Up8:50 AM, 20th July 2024, About 4 months ago
Been a landlord for 25 years - mostly without mortgages. Did have 7 properties - now down to 4. Never had a months arrears, but then they are higher end properties and I usually only take people on PAYE and not self employed.
However as tenants leave I will sell up - fed up of it, fed up of anti landlord rhetoric and new licensing laws even for non HMOs
Fed up of being held ransom by freeholders and leasehold management companies almost universally being bandits.
I will add to my REIT portfolio - I can get 8% yields on care home, and doctors surgeries.
It’s been a ride - but now time to get out of dodge..
David100
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Sign Up9:55 AM, 20th July 2024, About 4 months ago
I assume this does not apply to Landlords wanting to sell the property. Thats the plan B option. I am waiting for tenants to leave so I can sell, but they dont want to go.