Peer slams government’s rent tribunal plan and calls for cap on rent increases

Peer slams government’s rent tribunal plan and calls for cap on rent increases

Justice hammer, papers falling and Renters Rights' Bill
12:02 AM, 8th July 2025, 10 months ago 12

A Conservative Peer and former Housing Minister claims the government’s proposed rent tribunals are not the solution and calls for rents to be raised only ONCE every four years.

Lord Young of Cookham, argues that letting renters appeal unreasonable rent increases at First-Tier Tribunal is “ill-equipped” to solve the problem.

Instead, he supports an amendment in the Renters’ Rights Bill by Lord Best, which would limit rent increases to either wage growth or inflation for four years, after which rents could be raised to market levels.

Wildly inconsistent decision-making

In an article for The Times, Lord Cookham claims he does support the abolition of Section 21 but says the government is making a “big mistake” with part of the Renters’ Rights Bill.

He explains that once Section 21 is abolished, the in-tenancy rent increase process becomes even more important because landlords will no longer be able to evict tenants who object to a rent rise. He calls for a fair mechanism that balances the interests of both landlords and tenants.

Lord Cookham criticises the government’s proposed solution to allow renters to appeal “unreasonable” rent increases at first-tier tribunal.

He explains to The Times: “A thorough scan of tribunal decisions shows wildly inconsistent decision-making. There are cases where tribunals did not physically inspect properties but relied on Rightmove or Google to approve substantial rent increases.

“In a case in December 2023 a tribunal simply “viewed the exterior from a Google Street View image”, using a year-old image of the property exterior, to approve a 41% rent increase. And on another occasion, a tribunal cited their “own general knowledge” of local rents to justify a decision.

“I fear the tribunal will be totally ill-equipped to mediate rent increase disputes for England’s 12 million private tenants.”

Replace private landlord who is now selling up

Lord Cookham argues the build-to-rent sector is becoming increasingly important as small private landlords leave the market.

He tells The Times: “What is needed now is the encouragement of long-term institutional investment in property for rent to replace the private landlord who is now selling up. Such institutions won’t need to give notice because they will want tenants to stay as long as the tenant wishes.

“These landlords will need a functioning renting market giving certainty, not individual tribunals agreeing or rejecting rent increases based on opaque criteria.

“Larger, institutional landlords, managing hundreds or thousands of tenants, face a potential administrative nightmare if even a small portion of their tenants regularly appeals rent rises, with cases taking up days of staff time. This could undermine investment from the build-to-rent sector, which the country needs.”

However, Lord Cookham fails to mention that for many tenants, particularly those on low incomes, build-to-rent remains simply unaffordable, with one London development charging £2,600 a month for a studio flat and £4,600 for a three-bedroom flat.

Limit rent increases to wage growth or inflation for four years

Lord Cookham claims the “complicated tribunal system” will do nothing to help landlords and tenants and urges peers in the House of Lords to back an amendment from Lord Best to cap rent increases to once every four years.

He explains to The Times: “I am supporting an amendment to the bill from Lord Best (former chair of the Affordable Housing Commission), which would limit rent increases to wage growth or inflation for four years, after which they could be raised to market levels.

“This would give landlords the certainty of modest annual rent increases, and tenants more security in their homes in the early years of a tenancy, before a “release valve” every four years prevents rents from diverging too far from the market rate.

“I hope the government will consider it. If not, I fear the issue will be back on ministers’ desks before long.”

Lord Cookham’s full article in The Times can be read here (for some users this may be behind a paywall)


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Comments

  • Member Since June 2015 - Comments: 333

    10:25 AM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    Which inflation index is he talking about?
    Building maintenance costs have very little correlation to either CPI or RPI. Wage growth is incredibly skewed due to numerous factors. What relationship is there between the day rate for a skilled artisan and a minimum wage checkout operator?
    Will our mortgage costs, utilities and insurance have increases capped in the suggested manner?

  • Member Since February 2018 - Comments: 627

    10:27 AM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    “He calls for a fair mechanism that balances the interests of both landlords and tenants.”

    Does Lord Cookham experience ‘oncec every four year inflation increases in his costs’, the man’s no Conservative.

  • Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1013

    10:32 AM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    …this guy wouldn’t be being sponsored by the BTR industry, Generatino Rent or Shelter would he?

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1581

    11:03 AM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    Inflation is an AVERAGE cost increase for a basket of goods made up by government.

    It won’t include things such as the cost of the RRB’s redress scheme membership, the cost of the RRB’s database registration, the cost of the RRB’s multiple increased risks for the PRS, the cost of the RRB’s decent homes standard, the cost of the government’s EPC changes for the PRS, the cost of random selective licensing.

    Rent controls will see more landlords escape the nonsense, higher rents for little gain for tenants, more repossessions by lenders.

    People should stop interfering with the housing market and should focus entirely on fixing the problem.

    I’ll type this slowly in case any Labour MPs, peers, voters are reading. The problem is uncontrolled mass migration. Fix it or find a job that better suits your skill set.

    The p

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2016

    11:22 AM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    The Telegraph has just reported on the effect of the SNP rent controls in Scotland:

    https://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/tax/backbenchers-labour-wealth-tax/#:~:text=The%20backbenchers%20now%20know%20the,hole%20of%20its%20own%20making.

    The government can’t build enough homes fast enough (especially after the increase in minimum wage and employers NI) and cannot solve the housing crisis by penalising private investment in housing at a time when it is struggling to pay its bills and find more money for defence. Driving competition out of the market will increase the government benefits bill, not decrease it.

    The government shouldn’t be allowed to enact its Renters Reform Bill before the the Competition and Markets Authority has taken another look at it because in its present form their bill will do a great deal of collateral damage. Stopping tenants from offering more than the asking price for example will just drive up the advertised rental price. Banning landlords from letting out band D properties will stifle the supply of housing.

  • Member Since June 2019 - Comments: 778

    12:14 PM, 8th July 2025, About 10 months ago

    At current rates, an increase evey four years would be somewhere between 150 and 200% in my local area is that really what he thinks tenants want,?

  • Member Since December 2015 - Comments: 292

    12:38 PM, 8th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    These idiots can call / demand / insist on whatever they like. If there ain’t no property to rent then it’s all academic!

  • Member Since May 2018 - Comments: 2016

    12:43 PM, 8th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by dismayed landlord at 08/07/2025 – 12:38
    If there ain’t no property to rent (and there won’t be much if they penalise people who can invest from investing in it) then it’s all expensive.

    And that’s the point of getting the Competition and Markets Authority to take a look at their proposals.

  • Member Since May 2020 - Comments: 17

    1:00 PM, 8th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    Rents to be raised only ONCE every four years, what planet is this person from!! Are our costs are only going to increase every 4 years lol I don’t think so, its time this lot got a grip and joined the real world.

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1581

    1:29 PM, 8th July 2025, About 9 months ago

    As I read it, the suggestion is rents increase every year by inflation or wage growth. The 4 year thing is an exception to this where rents can be raised to market rates.

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