12 months ago | 6 comments
It’s bizarre, isn’t it? Landlords, already battered by a barrage of legislative changes and economic pressures, are now being asked by the Labour government to offer their properties to asylum seekers.
The National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) has voiced strong opposition, saying the government needs to support us if they want more homes to become available.
For landlords, the Home Office request feels like a bitter irony – a government that has systematically squeezed the PRS now seeks its help to address a problem of its own making.
Britain’s housing crisis is no secret. With rents rocketing and house prices soaring to over eight times the average salary, young and working-age Britons are struggling to afford homes.
The tax burden, the highest since World War II, weighs heavily on these same citizens, who see their contributions funnelled into government-supported housing for asylum seekers.
Around 99% of migrants arriving via small boats claim asylum, gaining access to accommodation, healthcare, education and a weekly allowance of around £50.
While this might be less contentious if housing were abundant, the reality is different: every property allocated to an asylum seeker is one less for a British family priced out of the market.
For landlords, the government’s appeal to house asylum seekers – facilitated through contractors like Serco – comes against a backdrop of relentless policy changes.
The loss of Section 24 means landlords can no longer fully deduct interest on buy to let (BTL) mortgages, slashing profitability.
The abolition of Section 21 will make evictions a costly, drawn-out process, leaving landlords vulnerable to months of lost rent.
The end of Assured Shorthold Tenancies, with their six-month minimum, allows tenants to leave early, further destabilising income streams.
Add to this the Renters’ Rights Bill (RRB) and the looming EPC C standard, which applies only to the PRS and not to social or council housing. These measures feel like targeted attacks, designed to force landlords to sell up.
Why, then, would landlords volunteer to house asylum seekers?
Many of us feel betrayed, having worked hard to build property portfolios only to face what could be seen as punitive legislation.
The NRLA’s frustration echoes a broader sentiment: the government cannot expect cooperation from a sector it has consistently undermined and belittled us (even when they say ‘not all landlords’ are bad…).
The housing of asylum seekers also raises questions about fairness.
Right to Rent checks, a legal obligation for PRS landlords in England, obviously won’t need to be applied when government contractors are involved.
I imagine that some of the new rules under RRB won’t be enforced either.
This double standard will fuel resentment, as most landlords face strict compliance burdens while others will appear to be exempt.
Meanwhile, the government’s reliance on private rentals to house asylum seekers – often at a cost of £145 per night for hotel accommodations when properties aren’t available – highlights its failure to address the root causes of migration and housing shortages.
Tenants, too, are caught in the crossfire. The government’s push to regulate the PRS, cheered on by groups like Shelter and Acorn, has led to an exodus of landlords.
As properties are sold, rental stock dwindles, leaving tenants scrambling for homes.
The irony is that the very policies meant to protect renters may be pricing them out of the market or, worse, making them homeless.
When tenants finally realise that government actions have reduced their housing options, the relentless narrative blaming ‘greedy landlords’ may lose its shine.
The social contract – where citizens contribute through taxes in exchange for support, especially in later life – is slowly fraying.
Landlords, like other taxpayers, see their tax contributions being used to outbid them in their own market, as the government secures private rentals for asylum seekers.
This will breed resentment, not just among landlords but among young Britons who feel their sacrifices are unrewarded. I’m already seeing this on my social media feeds.
The migration debate, already heated, is ignited further by the optics of newcomers receiving homes while locals languish on waiting lists.
For landlords, the decision to house asylum seekers is understandably fraught.
On the one hand, guaranteed rental income from (lucrative) government contracts could be appealing.
On the other, the risks – potential property damage, bureaucratic hurdles and a public backlash – loom large. Just read the experiences of other landlords.
Many landlords I know are simply unwilling to engage with a government they feel has declared war on their livelihoods.
The solution lies not in cajoling landlords but in addressing the housing crisis and migration policy holistically – and honestly.
Building more homes, streamlining asylum processes and restoring fairness in the PRS would do more to ease tensions than appeals to a beleaguered sector.
Until then, landlords will remain sceptical, and the divide between government and the PRS will only widen. This will not, I predict, end well.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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Member Since January 2025 - Comments: 57
3:03 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Suicide Jockey at 02/05/2025 – 09:38
Some landlords will have no other choice soon
If your rental property is located right next to a ‘supported housing’ development, if there are also 50+ ‘supported housing’ properties on the same estate, if the council have introduced Article 4 banning students/sharers, if the government will ban you from letting because you don’t have £15K for EPC work, then what other choice does a landlord have?
No family with children want to live next to drug users/people who have just been released from prison and the council have banned students sharers
Member Since October 2013 - Comments: 1630 - Articles: 3
3:10 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Billy Gunn at 02/05/2025 – 15:03
You raise an interesting point. If the area is already becoming a hell hole, you won’t be able to let at a decent rent or sell, because no decent tenant will want to live there. This government is creating the s**tholes in this country that they created where they came from and wanted to ‘escape’.
Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 1999
3:12 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Billy Gunn at 02/05/2025 – 15:03
I don’t think it’s necessarily a question of no other choice.
I have had far worse experiences as a landlord renting to people who had the right to live and work here than I ever had with the tenant that I suspect was an illegal economic migrant. My worst ever tenant worked for the council. She was ‘entitled’….always complaining about things…always asking for things to be changed that didn’t need fixing. After she left I vowed that I would never again rent to anybody that told me she worked for the council.
I would far rather rent to an asylum seeker under the Serco contract than to rent to somebody who told me they worked for the council. And after my own experience I would consider the asylum seeker to be a lower-risk tenant.
Member Since July 2023 - Comments: 179
5:26 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Downsize Government at 02/05/2025 – 09:32
It’s not an AST.
It’s a business lease uo Serco
Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 762
6:43 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Jim K at 02/05/2025 – 17:26
The last copy I saw was a very one sided contract. After 5 years you would have no come back over any flooring or decorating. If your kitchen was 5 years old when you gave it to Serco after 10 years they would claim it was life expired so no compensation etc. Some repairs were deemed to be the landlords responsibility.
Once the RRB comes in they could potentially have no legal way to remove any tenants so will probably shrug their shoulders and walk away.
If you consider this at all please, please, read the contract and ideally get a professional to check it as well.
Member Since January 2025 - Comments: 57
10:04 PM, 2nd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by NewYorkie at 02/05/2025 – 15:10
It’s happened to me, just Google supported housing Birmingham.
I have a property near a Uni(which I currently live in but used to be rented to students), council will now not allow me to rent out to students or any sharers due to Article 4.
I’m an end terrace, a development right next to my house was bought last year by an association and is now housing drug users/ex-offenders, my house was burgled last year.
On my same estate their are also 50+ properties which are now supported housing as former students landlords have been banned from renting to students under Article 4, so they’ve turned to supported housing as it’s also exempt from licensing and a lot of other regs
As I’m an end-terrace, would cost roughly 25K to externally insulate, I don’t have a south facing roof for solar panels, EPC C is not realistic. But if I allow Serco or any other housing association to rent it then none of that matters, plus housing benefits for support housing residents are uncapped, you can get roughly 50K a year rent on a 5 year contract.
I would rather just rent to students but council have banned it
Member Since June 2013 - Comments: 3237 - Articles: 81
5:46 AM, 3rd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Utter bonkers isn’t it.
Cause we packing up & not housing anyone risky any more, in Nottingham, the woman with 8 kids (yes I have several with 10 kids) who could get 4 bed house now has to have 3 bed house.
The woman who had the 3 bed house now has to have the 2 bed house or a flat.
The person that had the flat is now in a hostel.
The lowest tenants who are back of queue for housing now can’t get the hostel, so are homeless.
Landlord used to take up this slack & the asylum seekers etc.
I’ve a mate who’s renting out to Serco for exactly this article.
Member Since February 2020 - Comments: 360
7:38 AM, 3rd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Jim K at 02/05/2025 – 17:26Ok, then it’s not a fixed 5 year contract. Serco can’t give a section 21, and tenants will not leave at the end.
Member Since June 2014 - Comments: 1562
8:04 AM, 3rd May 2025, About 11 months ago
“Correct me if I am wrong, but aren’t the government offering 5 year fixed contracts to house the asylum seekers?
But then at the same time ending fixed term tenancies?
How does that work?
The same as it does with hotels. (Wrongly)
Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1013
8:21 AM, 3rd May 2025, About 11 months ago
Excuse my cynicism but this all seems a bit contrived.
The Government introduces (-ing) legislation, higher costs (EPC) and taxes driving Landlords to the brink (some over the brink) then offer them the deal of the century, supposedly, to house illegal immigrants. 🤔🤔🤔🤔🤔