Angela Rayner accuses landlords of profiting from local housing allowance

Angela Rayner accuses landlords of profiting from local housing allowance

Angela Rayner next to houses stacked up with a pile of money
9:38 AM, 10th July 2025, 9 months ago 44

Angela Rayner has rejected calls to unfreeze the local housing allowance (LHA) arguing that increasing LHA rates would simply funnel more money to landlords.

In a Housing, Communities and Local Government Committee (HCLG) session on the spending review, Housing Secretary Angela Rayner rejected calls to unfreeze the Local Housing Allowance, emphasising that the solution was to “not give money to private landlords” and focus instead on building more homes.

Ms Rayner also accused landlords of evicting families without excuse, then hiking rents and putting someone else in their place.

Not give money to private landlords

Florence Eshalomi, chair of the HCLG, questioned Ms Rayner over the government’s stance on the Local Housing Allowance and said the freeze was pushing families into poverty. She asked whether a case was being made to review the allowance.

The Conservative government announced an end to the four-year freeze to LHA rates in 2023; however, the Labour government froze the LHA rates again during the Budget last year.

Ms Rayner swerved Ms Eshalomi’s question and claimed the government is working to alleviate the pressures on homelessness, adding that it is spending £34 billion per year on housing support, including £12 billion in the private rented sector.

However, Ms Rayner blamed landlords for benefiting from Local Housing Allowance payments.

She told the committee: “In the longer term, the only way we are going to fix this crisis is not by giving more money to private landlords for people who should be in social housing; we need to have a social housing revolution.

“That is why I have been so bold as to push for the biggest increase in the Affordable Homes Programme, alongside the rent convergence.”

Landlords evict families with no excuse

Ms Eshalomi then fired back at Ms Rayner and asked: “Whether the local housing allowance freeze is a political choice by the government to push children into poverty.”

Ms Rayner again talked about the government’s funding commitment to housing support, but then repeated that private landlords were to blame.

She said: “We are investing by putting money into local housing allowance, but the truth is that the way to fix the problem is not by having significant rent increases under private landlords who put social tenants in private accommodation.

“The way to fix the problem is to have more social housing for people who desperately need it.”

NRLA warning on LHA

Ms Eshalomi pointed out that even the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) has spoken of the impact of the local housing allowance. The NRLA has extensively campaigned to restore the Local Housing Allowance (LHA) rates to the 30th percentile of local market rents.

Ms Rayner argued the government was building 1.5 million homes to tackle the crisis, but Ms Eshalomi said: “We can’t build homes fast enough. In the interim, they are renting in the private rented sector, but a lot of them are not able to rent locally because of the freeze on the local housing allowance.”

Ms Rayner again did not answer the question and, once again, blamed landlords, saying: “Again, on top of that, we have the Renters’ Rights Bill, with its protections, and the extra money we set aside for homelessness prevention.

“Local councils can look at some of that for ways to prevent homelessness and at section 21 no-fault evictions, along with other challenges that families face that lead them into homelessness in the first place.

“We have seen landlords evict families, with no excuse, and then ramp up the rent and put somebody in. That is because the housing market is in such a dire situation. We have taken measures to try to prevent some of those egregious practices, as the same time as building the homes that we need.”

Despite Ms Rayner’s claim landlords evict for no reason, the English Housing Survey Private Rented Sector report for 2021-2022 reveals that the majority of renters (77%) ended their last tenancy because they wanted to move, not because of eviction.

Watch a clip of Angela Rayner from the committee below


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Comments

  • Member Since July 2025 - Comments: 1

    3:33 PM, 11th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    May I ask how if Rayner’s husband already married her brother, or this is only when there is a council house which Rayner wants to buy via Right To Buy?

    Don’t understand what sane person-landlord would risk to put a benefits person into their house. Let them go to the imaginer social housing or Rayner’s council properties which she bought.

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2188 - Articles: 2

    9:01 AM, 12th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    I promise as a landlord that I will never again benefit from the Local Housing Allowance.

  • Member Since July 2023 - Comments: 14

    9:27 AM, 12th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 10/07/2025 – 08:49
    I never raised rents on 11 properties for nearly 12 years. Then I got hit with £35k of costs and two wrecked places because the council and shelter advised the to sit tight until the bailiffs arrived. Since that episode the rents go up every year without fail.

  • Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 150

    11:27 AM, 13th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    In Reply to Cider drinkers first comment of 550 pm a lot of landlords were in similar situation that works out at less than 20 per day for a roof above your head a valuable property and maintenance free.
    Through it selective licence and section 24 tax.
    and possible mortgage payments. Your probably down to less than a tenner a day.

  • Member Since December 2015 - Comments: 292

    11:36 AM, 13th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Northernpleb at 13/07/2025 – 11:27
    Excellent business model then!
    Don’t forget the passive investment income form the capital appreciation!
    Less a bit of tax and then allow for inflation.
    The perfect example of a sound investment!

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2188 - Articles: 2

    11:49 AM, 13th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    I must be getting senile, for I am confused by the government’s attitude. Angela Rayner does not want private landlords benefiting from housing benefit, but the RRB demands that we do not discriminate against benefit tenants. How am I to reconcile these conflicting requirements?

  • Member Since May 2016 - Comments: 28

    9:53 PM, 13th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    ” The NRLA has extensively campaigned to restore the Local Housing Allowance (LHA) rates to the 30th percentile of local market rents”
    Really????? Must have missed that. Just another indicator that they are completely ineffective.

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 1997

    11:24 AM, 14th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ben Beadles Alter Ego at 12/07/2025 – 09:27
    I think that you are not alone here. Small portfolio landlords used to hold rents down a bit to minimise the risk of void periods. I used to do this and my agent used to advise me to do this. But then the government changes things, you get stung with a big bill, and you’ve no choice but to raise rents.

    Every time any government meddles in the housing market what happens is that every landlord has no choice but to raise rents: The worst offender in recent years has been the SNP.

    What the UK governments are doing by meddling in the PRS is guaranteeing that rents will rise. If they wanted to do something about making sure that rents don’t just keep going up and up is to make sure that there is competition in supply. They need to get the CMA to take another look at the RRB.

  • Member Since April 2024 - Comments: 4

    3:27 PM, 14th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    It is clear that Rayner knows nothing about how the housing benefit is set up and works and I dear say neither do 95. % of the government .
    Housing benefits the best scheme ever to be invented by some very clever mathematicians.

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 1997

    11:33 AM, 15th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Paul Goulder at 14/07/2025 – 15:27
    I just remortgaged. Just consulting the terms of my mortgage. They say amongst other things:

    “You must not….rent our your property to: …..social landlords, for example housing associations or local authorities;….asylum seekers;”

    So I’m guessing that I could take social housing tenants if I wanted to (although I cannot think why I would want to). And it looks as though I wouldn’t be able to rent out to Serco either even though it is probably financially more attractive than renting to social housing tenants.

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