SNP plan to give tenants first refusal on homes sparks backlash

SNP plan to give tenants first refusal on homes sparks backlash

House for sale in Scotland with Scottish flag, illustrating housing policy debate
8:33 AM, 13th April 2026, 4 hours ago 7
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Ahead of the Scottish elections, the SNP has pledged tenants will get first refusal if a landlord puts their home up for sale.

Under the proposed plans, when a landlord puts the property on the market, renters in Scotland would be given a period of exclusivity to purchase it “at a fair market rate”.

The Scottish Conservatives have claimed the plans “will spook landlords”, while the Scottish Association of Landlords (SAL) warns there is a lack of clarity over what constitutes a “fair market price”.

Forcing people to upend their whole lives

First Minister John Swinney claimed the policy would help young people who are stuck renting and can’t save up for a deposit.

He said: “So many people are stuck paying more on rent than they would on a mortgage, and with costs just going up and up, there is nothing left over at the end of the month to save for a deposit.”

“That has made it all the more difficult when private renters find themselves having to leave their home because the owner has decided to sell up. As well as forcing people to upend their whole lives, it also has serious financial implications.

“That is why I will give renters the right to first refusal on the home they live in, at a fair market rate, if the owner of the property decides to sell.”

Reckless intervention in the housing market

However, the Scottish Conservatives warn the policy would make it harder for first-time buyers to get on the housing ladder.

Scottish Conservative housing spokesperson, Meghan Gallacher, said: “This is another reckless SNP intervention in the housing market.

“Far from doing what John Swinney thinks it will do, it will spook landlords, choke off supply and instead make it even harder for first-time buyers to get on the ladder.

“John Swinney is talking this up as support for renters, but the reality will be a housing market in Scotland that is even more broken.

“The Scottish Conservatives will scrap LBTT, Scotland’s version of stamp duty, and focus on delivering 80,000 affordable homes. That is the only way to truly make home ownership achievable.

“The best way to stop an SNP majority and get Scotland building again is for Scots to vote for the Scottish Conservatives on their peach ballot on May 7th.”

Meaning of fair market price

Landlord organisation SAL warns the devil will be in the detail over how the policy would work in practice, particularly around the meaning of a “fair market price”.

SAL chief executive John Blackwood said: “We welcome any move that results in more homes becoming available as part of an effort to tackle the housing crisis.

“Many landlords tell us that they would prefer to sell to their tenants and allow them to stay in their homes, saving landlords the hassle of ending the tenancy and marketing the property for sale.

“However, the question for landlords will be what is the “fair market price”, and, as always, we await the details to determine who this policy will actually support.

“For far too long, the discussion has been framed as pitting landlords’ rights against those of tenants. We hope we can reframe that as more of a partnership between a customer and a provider.

“To properly tackle the housing emergency, we need a full range of properties available, including in the private rented sector. This means incentivising landlords to invest and grow their portfolios and avoiding measures that actively discourage them.”

The Scottish elections take place on May 7, and SAL has previously told Property118 that politicians need to change their attitude towards landlords.


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Comments

  • Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 767

    9:15 AM, 13th April 2026, About 3 hours ago

    I think the number of landlords who would trust the SNP to come up with a fair market price could be counted on one hand.

    There are other issues here as well, just how long does the landlord have to ‘leave’ the offer with the tenants, a month, three months? All of which will add delays for selling and further complicate the probate process.

  • Member Since June 2015 - Comments: 194

    10:45 AM, 13th April 2026, About 2 hours ago

    I a tenant cannot save for a deposit and afford to have a mortgage now how is offering them the property going to help them?

  • Member Since October 2023 - Comments: 202

    10:46 AM, 13th April 2026, About 2 hours ago

    I am retiring, and have offered to sell to the tenants at well BELOW market rate. But they declined, they want to rent. This delay cost me two years while they hmm’d and haa’d saying they were looking into mortgages etc.

  • Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1632 - Articles: 3

    11:23 AM, 13th April 2026, About 57 minutes ago

    Not Scotland, but my tenant was interested in buying my flat after living there for 6 years, when she found she could get a mortgage for less than her rent. She pulled out when she realised ‘owning’ your own home involved more costs than the just the mortgage… Service charges, ground rent, insurance, repairs & maintenance… all the things her rent covered. She realised her rent was very low by comparison, but still complained when I increased it. She’s now a ‘previous’ tenant.

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2000

    11:25 AM, 13th April 2026, About 55 minutes ago

    For years Scotland has had a system for buying homes that is arguably fairer than much of the rest of the UK in that there would be a guide-price, purchasers would submit sealed bids, and the highest bidder would get the property. That’s fair isn’t it? It means no gezumping, fair to both vendor and purchaser.

    It’s hard to see what’s fair about what the SNP is currently proposing. A lot of commentators have claimed that there is a housing emergency in Scotland. But every time the SNP attacks the private rental sector, all that happens is that it makes investment in housing in Scotland unattractive. And Scottish landlords invest in England instead:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/property/scottish-landlords-buying-english-property-record-rate-escape/?msockid=0b8a4155c7db6ba1058955b1c6196a07

    Predictably, faced with a crisis, the SNP then blames Westminster for not giving it enough money because that’s always its get-out-of-gaol-free-card.

    The truth is that the crisis is a crisis of the SNP’s own making because it made investment in housing in Scotland unattractive, and it keeps on doing it. The most useful thing the SNP has done in recent years is to demonstrate that rent controls don’t work and that they make the situation worse.

    If the SNP needs to treat renters in Scotland fairly it just needs to ensure that the renters have equal access to the sealed-bids system.

  • Member Since March 2020 - Comments: 185

    11:28 AM, 13th April 2026, About 52 minutes ago

    Reply to the comment left by David100 at 13/04/2026 – 10:46
    I’m selling up and I have offered my flats to three of my tenants to buy. They’d been in the flats for over 3 years. They are all on very good salaries in stable jobs. However, none of them wanted to buy and preferred to continue renting. Renting is a better option for many people. Not all young people are obsessed with buying as soon as they can afford it.

  • Member Since September 2022 - Comments: 18

    11:39 AM, 13th April 2026, About 41 minutes ago

    I would welcome my tenant to purchase the property. The tenants salary is 81k/year so I am sure he could afford to buy. The fair market price is obvious because various properties within the block come up for sale on a regular basis. All selling quickly.
    I would prefer to sell, but the tenant as just signed another lease and during the previous 3 years he has rented he as always paid on time and never had any issues.
    I have noticed that the prices in the other properties in the block are reducing. I guess I will just hang on to it till hopefully there is a change of government.

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