Shelter reveals that social rents are 60% cheaper than in the PRS

Shelter reveals that social rents are 60% cheaper than in the PRS

0:03 AM, 3rd June 2024, About a month ago 23

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Social housing tenants enjoy rents that are 60% cheaper than private rented sector (PRS) tenants are paying, Shelter says.

The charity says the difference is £828 per month, on average, and is calling on all political parties to build more affordable social homes.

It says that tenants in London would be £1,400 better off, while those in the East of England would save £630.

And in the South East, renters would be £730 a month better off.

‘Social housing enables people to live better lives’

The charity’s chief executive, Polly Neate, said: “Social housing enables people to live better lives, but we just don’t have enough of it – not by a long shot.

“Decades of failure to build genuinely affordable social homes has left the country in a dire state.

“We continually hit shameful records with numbers of homeless children and sky-high rents, as more and more families are plunged into homelessness.”

She adds: “For many, this means years of upheaval and uncertainty, stripping the chance for families to set down roots, for children to thrive at school and taking the power away from people to live the life they want.”

Living in temporary accommodation

Shelter also says a record 145,800 children are homeless and living in temporary accommodation with their families.

It argues that with affordable social homes, those families would be ‘insulated’ from homelessness, and it would help keep communities together.

Ms Neate said: “The housing emergency has been wilfully ignored for too long. All the signs point to one solution and it’s the only one that works.

“Now that a General Election has been called, we cannot afford to waste any time.

“All political parties must commit to building genuinely affordable social homes – we need 90,000 a year over 10 years to end the housing emergency for good.”


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Comments

Lee Bailey

9:04 AM, 8th June 2024, About 4 weeks ago

Social housing doesnt have to meet the stricter legislation imposed on the PRS. Nor does it pay 40% tax on gross rent due to Section 24 of the finance act.

Sell all our house, move the money offshore, F this pathetic country

Neil Robb

7:14 AM, 9th June 2024, About 4 weeks ago

This is a load of nonsense . Most of my rents are in line with social housing . Only in the last two years an I really pushing my rents up . Why the Scottish government SNP green party Patrick Harvie brought in rent controls and eviction ban.
My Scottish properties are still low but properties elsewhere are being pushed up .

Even then many are still below lha rates. New build three bed rent paid £600 lha in area £750. I could give loads of examples .

Shelter love to twist the facts like single mother evicted at christmas.what they did not say the lady was sofa surfing on her mother's coach and it was actually her family asked her to leave so she could get council house.

Or the other story NHS worker evicted by landlord. During COVID.
When in fact the person was a lodger not a tenant . Living with a older person who was frightened of catching COVID.

What many people don't know or understand is most social housing and housing associations are registered charities . But are classed as private sector but when it comes to these stories they are happy not to say this.

It is not private rents are to high but social rents to low.

I posted about this before in northern Ireland the housing executive own 82000 properties. Rents between £300 to £500 a month. When many of my rents are or just above.

If they added £20 a week to rents it would generate an extra £85 million a year. Imagine how many properties they could build without borrowing.

Increase this by £30 or £40 this number becomes huge

No borrowing rents still low.

You would think NRLA SAL Or any other landlord organisation would speak up.

When private landlords put tenants in they only get the lha rate the tenant is entitled too.

But housing association get rent they ask for.

Paul

13:11 PM, 20th June 2024, About 2 weeks ago

Fine by me, go stay in Social Housing.

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