Charity urges balanced rent controls to tackle rising rents

Charity urges balanced rent controls to tackle rising rents

Scales balancing rent controls against rising rents in London property market scene
8:01 AM, 19th May 2026, 1 day ago 12

A charity is calling for rent controls to be introduced in a balanced way to mitigate unwanted consequences.

A report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation reveals that if rent increases were capped at the Consumer Price Index (CPI) within tenancies, and CPI + 2% between tenancies, renters would save £1,200 by 2030.

However, industry experts have warned that rent controls do more harm than good.

The vast majority of landlords are profitable

The report cites polling by More in Common showing that 79% of the public believe the government should play a role in ensuring private rents are affordable.

The charity acknowledges that the government has resisted calls to introduce rent controls, while critics argue such policies could trigger a rapid sell-off of rental properties, reducing housing supply and harming tenants.

However, the charity argues landlords have continued to generate “supernormal” returns and strong profits.

The report says: “The vast majority of landlords are profitable on the rental income side of their investment: 93% of landlords in 2018 and 2021, and 95% in 2024, made a profit on their rental income.

“The fact that the proportion making an overall positive return on equity (ROE) on their investment, between rental income and capital gains, each year is even higher, reaching 98.8% in 2024, suggests it may be a feature of the sector that some landlords will accept making a loss on rental income in exchange for strong capital gains.”

It adds: “Average pre-tax return on equity (ROE) for landlords across the sector over the period analysed has remained strong. Landlords made average annual pre-tax returns of 8.5% in 2018 and 9.2% in 2021. In 2024, average returns fell slightly to 6.9%, reflecting the impact of the sharp rise in interest rates in 2022.

“In each of the three years analysed, these average rates of return exceeded the benchmark rate for the wider real estate sector, which stood at between 4.75% and 4.95% between 2018 and 2024.”

Intervention on rents

Senior policy adviser at the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, Rosie Worsdale, says rent controls would help renters, but need to be introduced in a way that is manageable for landlords.

She said: “The analysis shows the sector has generally been characterised by landlords making supernormal rates of return. Even in the most recent period, a strong majority achieved returns that exceeded both economy-wide returns from comparable investments and rates of return in the broader real estate sector.

“We argue that the high level of returns available to landlords warrants intervention on rents, both to make housing more affordable for renters and to curb the excessive returns landlords are currently able to make, at least while supply catches up.

“This needs to happen at a manageable pace, however, to avoid a sharp shock to the availability of rental homes as landlords sell up. This can be partly addressed by improving the rental tax system, which is inefficient and poorly targeted at the landlords making the largest profits.”

Rent controls rarely work

However, as previously reported by Property118, rent controls do more harm than good and actually do far more damage than benefit tenants.

According to the Institute of Economic Affairs (IEA), while rent controls may initially lower rents for existing tenants, they typically lead to higher rents in uncontrolled sectors and reduce housing supply and quality.

Even in Scotland, the rent cap has been blamed for soaring rents, which have increased by 11.6%.

Data by Hamptons reveals Scottish landlords are increasing rents at a faster pace than anywhere else in Great Britain because of rent controls reshaping the market.

Lead analyst at Hamptons, David Fell, said: “The evidence from Scotland suggests that rent controls rarely work as intended.

“At best, they delay rent increases; at worst, they set a new benchmark where landlords feel compelled to increase their rents every year by the maximum allowed.

“Faced with uncertainty over future rules, many landlords choose to raise rents little and often rather than risk falling far below market levels.”


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Comments

  • Member Since November 2018 - Comments: 39

    5:17 PM, 19th May 2026, About 1 day ago

    Reply to the comment left by David at 19/05/2026 – 11:47
    Unfortunately the only way to combat the rent rise issue is to diary in exactly 12 monthly rent increases and don’t let the dates slip.
    This is an unintended consequence of the RRA.

  • Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 74

    4:10 PM, 20th May 2026, About 2 hours ago

    The rate of rent increase is now slowing. By December 2025, the yearly rise had already fallen to 3.9%.

    Band D council tax, on the other hand, increased by 5.0% (£109) to £2,280 for 2025–26. For 2024–25, the average increase was 5.1% (£106). Milk went up 12.6% in August 2025 compared with the previous year, while cereals rose by 4.5%.

    Facts must be used when making wild statements about rental increases, and the most up‑to‑date statistics must be relied upon. Rent is seen politically as an easy vote‑winner, as is the term “rogue landlord”. Regard must be tempered against false statistics issued by charities supported – both directly and indirectly – by governments and politically aligned think tanks. Regrettably, vote‑catching phrases designed to please an economy in decline are now the norm in Western economies. When repeated like a broken record, they lead millions of citizens to believe an untruth. You could call it the “1984 effect”.

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