3 months ago | 6 comments
Our glorious energy secretary, Ed Miliband, stood on a rooftop surrounded by solar panels this week, declaring the affordability crisis is the main worry for families. Then he unveiled the Warm Homes Plan and, I’m guessing, most private landlords across the country watched in disbelief.
The lunatic’s scheme demands that every rented property hit the minimum EPC band of C by October 2030. Just like that!
Labour has dropped the old 2028 cutoff for fresh tenancies, and they’ve also cut the cost cap landlords must cover themselves.
This government of clowns, liars, chancers and na’er-do-wells, still doesn’t understand that the EPC debacle will decimate rented housing stock levels in this country.
Older buildings, such as Victorian terraces and flats, dominate the sector but upgrading these homes is far from easy.
Internal insulation for older homes will trap moisture, so damp appears within years – just in time for Awaab’s Law to be in full effect.
We could spend thousands and still not meet the EPC C rating while damaging the fabric of a house.
Since returns sit at around 5% – 8% on average, there are lots of landlords looking realistically at seeing two years (or more) of profits being wiped out with the £10,000 cap.
Along with the demand feeling like a punishment, we also see lenders adding to the pressure by insisting on loans only for A-C properties.
If you’ve got a property at D or E, then good luck remortgaging before 2030. It will be a nightmare.
On social media, landlords vented frustration in impressive, old-fashioned British ways.
Among those saying that Miliband is a zealot chasing unrealistic Net Zero goals, others predicted a mass exit from the sector.
If Labour’s ham-fisted attempts at undermining landlords with the Renters’ Rights Act and the 2% tax increase on profits don’t hurt, then EPC will.
If your property already meets the criteria, then I’m genuinely pleased for you but there are going to be some difficult conversations ahead for many landlords. Mainly with a disbelieving accountant.
Imagine trying to upgrade a property and then the tenant stops paying rent and it takes many months to get possession.
Can you imagine how soul destroying that will be? Thousands spent upgrading, thousands down the drain on rent and thousands wasted on court processes.
And, heaven help me, the barmy plan pushes heat pumps and solar panels onto the sector.
No one mentions that electricity prices in Britain have soared 262% since 2004 and we pay among the highest rates worldwide.
Heat pumps look efficient on paper, but the power costs erase the savings. Plus, gas boilers are still much cheaper to run.
Maintenance adds another layer since servicing and spare parts for a heat pump cost far more than gas systems.
Solar panels carry their own irony, but Miliband won’t address this.
Two-thirds of what we use will arrive from China so taxpayers will fund imports that enrich foreign manufacturers.
That’s hardly the boost to British industry ministers would wish for.
The end result is predictable as more landlords quit so that fewer homes remain in the PRS.
Rents will stay high and Labour will declare victory by massaging the numbers.
It shouldn’t do, but October 2030 feels far away and a policy like this rarely dies.
The government wants greener homes, cheaper bills and fewer landlords – at least one of those wishes is going to come true.
In the end, the only thing getting truly heated is the anger among landlords forced to bankroll someone else’s green dream.
Idiots.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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Member Since June 2013 - Comments: 3248 - Articles: 81
10:05 AM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
My video to Ed on this a year ago when he announced it
https://youtu.be/ijMxRyuCGKI?si=v10mmKfqpTqRZPLL
Also why is not anyone on the news when they mentioning this botched insulation, that is a result of people wanting warmer houses, lower EPC’s.
Now Ed calling for it again, there will be millions more with botched insulation in 5 years time.
You cannot retrospectively fit older houses without some side effects.
Older houses by the way that already have new boiler, kitchen, windows, doors, tenant very happy & paying £100+ below market rent-What do u think is going to happen to those rents who are paying cheap rent?
Have u been to ask them what they want in THIER HOMES OF 20 YEARS?
Member Since August 2016 - Comments: 1190
12:20 PM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
“The lunatic’s scheme demands that every rented property hit the minimum EPC band of C by October 2030”.
It’s not law yet though. It’s still just sitting in Milliband’s warped mind. I doubt it will ever happen.
Member Since September 2018 - Comments: 3534 - Articles: 5
1:01 PM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 23/01/2026 – 12:20
he has to do something to qualify his existence. It allows him to tread water for a bit longer. Starmer position is dubious, so is his. Roll on the wake up call in May local elections.
Member Since September 2018 - Comments: 3534 - Articles: 5
1:04 PM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 23/01/2026 – 12:20
…all happening at exactly the same time as 1.5 million homes are going to be built by 2029….
err….where is the labour force???? Many laid off already and being on benefits is far more lucrative, especially when there are plenty of cash in hand opportunities…
Member Since June 2013 - Comments: 3248 - Articles: 81
3:05 PM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 23/01/2026 – 13:01
Problem is many of us spend money in the meantime.
Or panic
Or sell
Or tell tenants rent going up, I’ve had enough.
Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1586
4:44 PM, 23rd January 2026, About 3 months ago
Taking people out of fuel poverty and putting them into rent poverty.
I will increase rent if I spend £10,000 to save my tenant £160 per year.
Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 205
8:57 AM, 25th January 2026, About 3 months ago
Has anyone considered the fact that what tenants generally hate more than anything else is the disruption of building work going on around them? Even if it’s unavoidable, and even if the tenant asked for the work to be done, it can severely strain the relationship between tenant and landlord.
I suspect that some tenants will refuse to have the work done and landlords will then be forced to apply for an exemption on that basis, if that option is even available. Either that, or evict to sell or renovate.
Of course, if there is no exemption granted, the tenant refuses to leave or have the work done, and the courts and bailiffs take months, that could leave landlords in a very precarious position and potentially subject to large fines for circumstances over which they have no control.
Member Since June 2013 - Comments: 3248 - Articles: 81
5:44 AM, 26th January 2026, About 3 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Peter Merrick at 25/01/2026 – 08:57
Yes, they proper thick. No one EVER comes to ask the tenant WHAT they would like? Those that haven’t got a problem & happy & paying below market rent.
My tenants have hated it & never felt so unsafe since George Osborne started in 2015 with S24 then Nottingham Council with Selective Licensing in 2018 & so on.