Selective licensing will hit landlords in the cost-of-living crisis

Selective licensing will hit landlords in the cost-of-living crisis

10:10 AM, 10th August 2022, About 2 years ago 1

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A property expert says that the cost-of-living crisis calls into question the viability of selective private landlords licensing schemes.

Selective licensing gives councils the power to regulate privately rented housing in areas of high deprivation, crime, anti-social behaviour and migration or low housing demand.

This involves charging a fee for a five-year licence, which is not transferrable if the house is sold to another landlord during that time.

Ben Quaintrell, the managing director of Darlington-headquartered estate agent My Property Box, which covers the North East and North Yorkshire, stressed that he is not against initiatives that help tackle poor standards of housing and management.

He points to Durham County Council who, unlike many other local authorities that have only designated a handful of streets for selective licensing, have imposed the scheme on 29,000 properties – or 42% of the county’s private rented sector.

It charges a fee of £500 per property, although discounts were available for those landlords applying for a licence before July 31st or those seeking multiple licences.

‘Landlords who are financially squeezed’

Ben Quaintrell of My Property Box

But Mr Quaintrell cautioned: “This scheme runs the risk of increasing rents, with some landlords who are themselves financially squeezed, passing on the licensing costs to already hard-pressed tenants.

“With the cost-of-living crisis, fuelled by soaring inflation and an energy price cap expected to near £3,000 this October, any additional financial pressure – such as that created by selective licensing – could have a detrimental impact on the health and wellbeing of those in privately rented accommodation.”

He added: “I would also question why Durham County Council has imposed the licensing scheme on such a large proportion of the area’s privately rented housing stock.

‘Unfair mandatory tax on responsible private landlords’

“I contend that this is an unfair mandatory tax on responsible private landlords and that it is unlikely to induce unscrupulous landlords to improve their standards.

“In addition, it may drive landlords out of areas where there is already a shortage of rented properties.”

Under the scheme, it is an offence to let a property within a selective housing area without a licence and any landlord failing to comply faces prosecution and a hefty fine.

Licences have several conditions attached to make sure properties and tenancies are effectively managed.

Some of those stipulations are legally required, while others are in response to local conditions designed to tackle problems affecting a particular licensing area.

The aim is to improve the condition and management of rented homes and raise the health and wellbeing of tenants and curbing anti-social behaviour.


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Comments

Mick Roberts

11:00 AM, 13th August 2022, About 2 years ago

U telling me.
Nottingham Labour Council are bringing in a new scheme Aug 2023-Apparently not a renewal of the old scheme, although they not telling us what was wrong with the old scheme-And the cost is gonna be something like £800+. When Oxford Council can do it for £200 with accreditation.

£800+ in Cost of Living Crisis -Who do they think is paying for this? As in my business, tenants pay for everything. No rent no house. Boiler more expensive rent more expensive.
Rent has to cover all costs. Bringing in Selective Licensing on a house with zero problems where tenant is paying cheap rent, there's only one thing gonna happen isn't there-And tenant won't be happy with it.

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