Call for ‘fair rents’ system as prices rise in a 'national phenomenon'

Call for ‘fair rents’ system as prices rise in a ‘national phenomenon’

Fair rents concept illustrated with rising rent costs, house model and upward arrow over stacked coins
8:03 AM, 18th May 2026, 2 weeks ago 23

Private landlords face renewed pressure over rent controls after research found private rents are rising by between 6% and 9% a year in every region of England.

The New Economics Foundation (NEF) says rent rises are now a ‘national phenomenon’, with the lowest income private tenants spending 48.5% of their income on rent.

Its report calls for an ’emergency brake’ on rent increases, limiting rises to the lower of inflation or 2%.

The think tank is also calling for a phased return to a national ‘fair rents’ system, based on the model used for much of the 20th century before being abolished in the 1980s.

Under that approach, landlords would receive what the report describes as a fair rent, while tenants would be protected from excessive charges.

Reviving fair rents system

The organisation’s senior researcher, Molly Harris, said: “No matter who you are, living in an affordable, secure home is the foundation of a good life.

“But private renters are often pushed into overpriced and substandard homes.”

She added: “The Renters’ Rights Act is a valuable step forward in making private renting safer and fairer – but it doesn’t address the UK’s problem of runaway rents.

“Reviving a proven system that was in place for over 70 years, but redesigned for the 21st century, would make life more affordable for private renters across the whole country.”

Every region saw rents rise

Before the pandemic, NEF says annual rent rises ranged from around 1% in the North East to more than 3% in the east of England.

Since then, every region has recorded annual growth of between 6% and 9%, with the three fastest-growing markets all in north-west towns.

The report links worsening affordability to decades of housing policy, including the removal of rent controls, the sale of social homes through right to buy and the growth of buy to let mortgages.

NEF also argues that high rents affect the wider economy by transferring income from renters, who are more likely to spend, to landlords, who are more likely to save or reinvest in assets.

It says this suppresses consumer demand and directs billions of pounds in housing benefit to private landlords.

The proposed emergency brake would apply within and between tenancies until a fair rents system is established.

Declare local rent pressures

NEF also says mayoral combined authorities should be given powers to declare local rent pressure and run fair rent pilots, with rent levels linked to local indices rather than uncapped market rents.

The report proposes a gradual roll-out in areas with the steepest rent rises, to avoid rent crashes or sharp increases in tenancy churn.

New-build homes would be exempt from the emergency brake and fair rents system for a period, before being phased in later.

NEF says its proposals draw on rent regulation systems in France, Germany, Ireland and Spain.

The report also points to polling by Ipsos MORI in 2024 which found 71% of the public supported capping annual rent rises at no more than the national inflation rate, while 8% opposed the policy.

A separate YouGov survey for Common Wealth found 75% support for rent controls linked to property quality and location.


Share This Article

Comments

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2125

    2:46 PM, 23rd May 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 23/05/2026 – 09:09
    Rent controls aren’t going to work. If they are introduced they will destroy competition and choice, disincentivise investment in residential accommodation and drive rents up for any new let or new tenancy.

  • Member Since December 2024 - Comments: 67

    9:38 AM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    Economics for Dummies
    Chapter 3
    When supply is severely constrained by over-regulation, don’t let NIMBYs block planning applications that will increase supply and stabilise house price and rent inflation.

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2125

    3:38 PM, 26th May 2026, About 1 week ago

    Reply to the comment left by Robin Wilson at 26/05/2026 – 09:38
    One of the favourite labour-government-lies is the we-are-building-1.5million-new-homes lie.

    The labour government came to power with its we-are-going-to-grow-the-economy-lie. Then having got into power it increased employers’ NI, dropped the level at which that was paid and proposed the Employment Rights Bill:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/jobs/career-advice/how-labour-became-the-party-of-youth-unemployment/?msockid=0b8a4155c7db6ba1058955b1c6196a07

    The effect of introducing policies like that is that they disproportionately affect the people on the margins as employers react in a variety of ways to reduce their risks and costs. The single mums working part time, the neurodivergent, the school-leavers with few qualifications, the university graduates with qualifications but not the skills they need to develop in their first-time jobs all suffer disproportionately from labour ivory-tower-incompetence. As the facts emerge it is very hard for labour to stick to the we-are-growing-the-economy-lie.

    And labour isn’t going to build 1.5 million new homes, with or without NIMBYS. It cannot build its way out of its problem. What it does need is competition and market delivery, but market delivery doesn’t just depend upon successful planning applications. Labour hasn’t got enough money to spend on defence and energy security and it cannot pay for the houses, even if the planning applications succeed.

    If the government introduces any form of ‘rent-controls’ on top of its Renters Rights Bill, effectively penalising investment in housing on top of the punishment that is already out there as a consequence of George Osborne’s changes, labour is going to find it even more difficult sticking to its we-are-building-1.5million-new-homes-lie.

Have Your Say

Every day, landlords who want to influence policy and share real-world experience add their voice here. Your perspective helps keep the debate balanced.

Not a member yet? Join In Seconds


Login with

or

Related Articles