1 year ago | 28 comments
The private rented sector is at a tipping point, and landlords are caught in the crosshairs of a perfect storm: we have a hostile Labour government, a media that’s easily swayed by tenant lobbying groups and landlord organisations struggling to make an impact.
The debate following the story about the Eastern Landlords’ Association (ELA) calling for a new national organisation to represent the sector struck a chord.
With the Renters’ Rights Bill coming soon, an exodus of landlords from the market is already underway, shrinking the pool of available homes and leaving tenants with fewer options.
Yet, despite the stakes, the voice of the landlord remains faint, drowned out by the belligerent noise of groups like Generation Rent and Shelter.
It’s time for landlords to stop being reasonable, start fighting tooth and nail and demand to be heard — or risk losing everything.
So, let’s congratulate ELA’s Paul Cunningham for raising a worthy question – one that all landlords should consider.
For too long, landlords have been painted as the villains of Britain’s housing crisis.
Tenant advocacy groups churn out emotionally charged narratives, often laced with dubious statistics and illogical leaps, claiming that landlords wield unchecked power over vulnerable renters.
The media laps it up, and politicians – especially Labour, playing to the tenant-heavy voter base – nod along, eager to pull on its big boots to give a kicking to a group they’ve never liked: private sector landlords.
The Bill is the latest blow, piling on regulations that make a difficult business less viable.
Add in selective licensing schemes which were originally intended as a targeted tool but are now a cash cow for skint councils and it’s clear: this government isn’t just indifferent to landlords; it’s actively hostile.
But let’s not focus on Labour since the Tories also deserve a share in the brickbats being doled out after years of undermining landlords.
So, why aren’t landlords pushing back harder? Many don’t join organisations like the National Residential Landlords Association (NRLA) because they see them as too soft, too willing to compromise rather than confront.
Being reasonable obviously hasn’t worked – all we’ve done is embolden the opposition.
Tenant groups like Generation Rent thrive on loud, unapologetic advocacy, even when their arguments don’t hold water.
Take its obsession with Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions: they peddle it as the root of all tenant woes, ignoring that revenge evictions have been outlawed and that landlords often use S21 as a last resort against non-paying or destructive tenants.
These holes in their logic are glaring, yet landlord groups rarely exploit them with the ferocity needed to shift the narrative.
Another reason is that a small proportion of landlords have signed up to the NRLA which leaves me wondering about the rest. Do they even know that the RRB is hurtling towards them?
However, the NRLA and others have been warning that reforms like the Renters’ Rights Bill will drive landlords out of the PRS, reducing supply and pushing rents higher.
But warnings alone aren’t enough when the government’s agenda seems set – let’s hammer private landlords until the market is dominated by corporate ‘Build to Rent’ schemes.
Labour doesn’t really favour companies over individuals – it simply despises the idea of a private landlord owning property they’ve paid for with their own sweat and money.
And then ‘exploiting’ a tenant with a market rate rent for a comfortable and safe home.
So, what can be done? First, landlords need to get loud. We all need to join in.
OK, so the NRLA doesn’t have a problem with the demise of Section 21 and boosting membership numbers won’t help sway a government hell-bent on reshaping/destroying the PRS.
The approach of landlords needs to change, so let’s start by calling out the nonsense spouted by Shelter and Generation Rent – mainly about basic economics and S21.
Plus, social housing tenant satisfaction rates are much lower than the PRS so let’s highlight that.
We should also flag up that Build to Rent’s high-investment, low-return model won’t cater to low-income families.
We will see rents rise, and the housing shortage will worsen.
I keep asking: Where will tenants live then?
Landlords also need to seize control of the issues that matter: how will new EPC assessments work? Tell tenants they will pay for the upgrade.
Let’s be honest we have the best audience available to explain what is happening to the PRS and it’s our tenants.
Explain why rents are going up, why they are likely to lose their home because their landlord is fed up and the numbers no longer work.
We have the knowledge from decades of real-world experience but lack the muscle and know-how to make Westminster listen.
So, why not engage with tenants directly?
Explain how responsible landlords keep the PRS afloat and how driving them out harms renters most.
Better yet, confront tenant groups by exposing their flimsy arguments while offering a vision of a balanced market that works for everyone.
Labour’s doubling down on the Tories’ misjudged landlord bashing isn’t clever – it’s reckless.
Growth in the PRS stems from tenant demand outstripping supply, NOT landlord greed.
Layer on heavier regulation and taxation, and you get today’s sky-high rents and a sector where bad landlords have little incentive to improve.
Meanwhile, the idea that selling off rental properties eases the housing crisis is a fantasy.
The government can dictate how we run properties we’ve bought and maintained yet offers no rights in return.
That’s nonsense on stilts.
It’s time to stop whispering politely through associations and start shouting from the rooftops.
Support the NRLA, but demand it fights harder.
Call out the ignorance of policymakers who think tenants are better off homeless than renting from a private landlord.
If the wind is blowing against us, we don’t adjust the sails, we build a stronger ship.
Anything less, and the PRS, along with its tenants, will pay the price.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
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Member Since April 2015 - Comments: 20
1:58 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
Is there not a legal case for discrimination as regards social housing epcs?
Member Since September 2015 - Comments: 1013
2:26 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
A new landlord association was attempted a few years ago but was scuppered by landlord apathy. The Government exploit this apathy by employing a certain amount of divisive tactics e.g. taxing encumbered private Landlords, furnished accommodation landlords, etc.
And fundamentally the Government knows landlords have no teeth – we can hardly go on strike! The Government also know we are disparate /disorganised cohort so organising, say, a mass withholding of tax, would be difficult to achieve.
Our only weapon is exiting (which is what the Government want) and the resultant homelessness becoming a political embarrassment. A weak strategy given this Government’s shameless despising & contempt of the British people.
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 317
4:23 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
Lobbying does not work nowadays as we are too fragmented. Look at Scotland no lobbying of the SNP (Socialist National party) made any impact but made it worse as they raised stamp duty to nearly double digits and ALL EPCs for let properties need to be C by 2028! So the only thing will change Labours PRS war with English LLs will be the PRS crash in Scotland as they have seen what rents caps do there so that has really put them off OVERT rent controls but have allowed COVERT rent controls via the tenant challenging via FTT!!
Member Since November 2019 - Comments: 150
4:42 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
Labour may not like Landlords , But the Tenants wont be liking any Government but Reform when they cannot afford the rents and their is nothing to rent anyway.
Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 4
5:00 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
I absolutely agree 100% with all this post. I have expressed my concerns before. The voice of the landlord, their concerns fall on deaf ears and all we hear are how unscrupulous landlords are, they don’t care about their tenants. This is simply not true the majority are like us, caring, responsible wanting to provide a home.
I would urge landlords to write to their MP like I have done and set out your concerns. Don’t wait, do it
Member Since January 2024 - Comments: 341
5:12 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
Reply to the comment left by Karen Young at 28/02/2025 – 17:00
I assume you received a meaningless boilerplate response from your MP.
Member Since January 2023 - Comments: 317
9:45 PM, 28th February 2025, About 1 year ago
Most of my LL friends I know, that are not FULL TIME LLs like me, are oblivious to the changes coming BUT I don’t think they will do anything until they hear from their agent that their D rented property can’t be rented out anymore especially as the new EPC will be tougher to achieve a C. I expect my fellow LLs will then make the change to sell up/cash in by 2028. This will be THE year in the PRS calendar for a majority of the LLs not savvy with RRB or EPC changes due to exit significantly.
Member Since March 2017 - Comments: 5
10:31 AM, 1st March 2025, About 1 year ago
I am another who 100% agrees with the Crusader.
Perhaps he would use his eloquence to put forward a template letter outlining the case for unintended consequences that all Landlords could give to their tenants ?
Or a full page Ad in a National Paper for politicians to be careful of what they wish for ? I would be willing to financially contribute for sure without hesitation .
Let’s educate our Country on how we are being unfairly vilified as this is LONG overdue
Member Since August 2021 - Comments: 307 - Articles: 1
10:44 AM, 1st March 2025, About 1 year ago
Reply to the comment left by Gromit at 28/02/2025 – 14:26
Time for landlords to summon their inner Zelensky and stand up to the bullies in government.
It’s not that we do not have teeth, it’s just that they’re still in a glass on the bedside table.
As Jason Statham (and Zelensky) would say “You want to see if we’ve got the minerals?”
We need to rediscover and channel our bulldog spirit.
We control a scarce asset
We control supply
We control price (for now)
and we still have S21, so have control over who we grant access to our scarce resource.
What is to stop us organising a coordinated withdrawal of new rentals for 2 weeks?
(It worked for the doctors, nurses and train drivers)
Remember those student renter queues?
We cannot do this unless WE STAND TOGETHER.
The government are well behind on (and will not hit) their new homes target.
We are held to high standards, while government contractors providing homes for emergency and migrant housing are not. That’s how the government reward us for propping up a social housing sector that has failed to add capacity or meet their own decent homes standards.
Now we are facing the prospect of different rules for the PBSA and BTR operators.
Whether this is via the umbrella of all our existing landlord associations or we seek to build a national champion to defend landlords and their loyal tenants it is time to unite and push back on this government’s corrosive approach to the PRS, the jewel in the rental market.
The team at iHowz look forward to talking with hardworking landlords at the forthcoming London NLIS show on 19 March
https://www.landlordinvestmentshow.co.uk/2025
Why not take a look at what we are doing
https://ihowz.uk/
Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 88
2:06 PM, 1st March 2025, About 1 year ago
Reply to the comment left by ellis freeman at 28/02/2025 – 12:22
Can you post the link please Ellis to the EPC petition. It’s ridiculous it applies to the PRS and not social housing. We should all be signing it. LC…this is worthy of its own story imo. Let’s get some momentum going!