Renters' Rights Bill sparks more chaos: Are landlords and letting agents doomed?

Renters’ Rights Bill sparks more chaos: Are landlords and letting agents doomed?

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10:13 AM, 7th March 2025, 1 year ago 30

It’s not even law yet but the dreaded Renters’ Rights Bill has spread its tentacles from landlords and tenants to letting agents.

That might come as a surprise to lots of readers, but it appears that smaller agencies are taking their cue to leave the PRS now.

According to Spicerhaart, small letting firms are scrambling to offload their businesses as uncertainty mounts and they are following landlords out of the PRS.

Despite this, the government will undoubtedly say that there is no evidence of an exodus taking place.

Putting fingers in your ears won’t distract from the bad news that’s coming down the line. But we’ll come to that.

Leave landlords high and dry

Let’s face it, it came as a surprise to me that letting agents wouldn’t want to embrace the brave new Labour world where perfect tenants effectively take control of landlord properties.

But this news isn’t just a ripple – the RRB could be a tidal wave that threatens independent agencies and leaves landlords high and dry.

It was also interesting to read the government’s chilling forecast that a staggering £391.7 million will be lost to letting agencies over the next decade, fuelled by landlords cashing out.

That’s incredible, isn’t it?

So, here we have ministers insisting there’s no proof their policies shrinking the PRS – yet the government’s own data paints a bleak picture.

Smaller landlords – those backbone investors who’ve long kept the rental market ticking over – are now selling up in droves.

While the supply of homes to rent isn’t crashing yet, it is stagnating and failing to keep pace with surging tenant demand.

That’s a demand driven by shifting societal trends and net migration, which is also pushing up rents, so tenants feel the pinch.

Backbone of the PRS

Government tax policies aren’t helping either since they favour corporate landlords who can offset finance costs against profits.

Meanwhile, small PRS landlords, that is the traditional, non-incorporated property owners, can’t dodge the tax hammer.

We now face a stark choice: do we hike rents to cover soaring costs or abandon the game entirely?

I’ve mentioned before that I don’t want to do the latter.

And I’m certainly not keen on doing the former either.

Lots of small landlords are stuck between a rock and a hard place – and the gap is getting tighter.

I do know that it is the tenants who will pay the price. It’s always the tenants.

Landlords decide to quit

For landlords clinging on, letting agents remain a lifeline for many, providing a buffer against the headaches of tenant disputes and eviction wrangles.

But as more landlords decide to quit, agents’ incomes are taking a nosedive.

New regulations also mean more paperwork, more compliance and more staff costs that smaller outfits simply can’t shoulder.

So, it’s no surprise that there’s a wave of sell offs, with portfolios merging into fewer, larger letting agencies.

Management fees might be holding steady for now, but as local, hands-on firms vanish, replaced by distant corporate giants, expect charges to creep up and service quality to suffer.

Don’t worry though Generation Rent because tenants will foot that bill.

Landlords battered by tax changes

The irony is that the big, corporate landlords, the ones the government seems to champion, might not even need agents.

They’ve got the resources to handle tenancies in-house.

It’s the smaller, ‘non-professional’ landlords, battered by tax changes and unable to offset mortgage interest, who’ll lean hardest on agents to mitigate risks.

Yet, many will decide it’s not worth the hassle if their agent leaves.

For those who persist, they’ll have to jack up rents to cover the rising agent fees and the extra tax burden and pushing affordability further out of reach.

Small agents at risk

Letting agents, like landlords, must now weigh their options. If their books are heavy with older, draughty PRS properties leased to tenants on benefits, winding down might be the smartest move.

But those managing modern, energy-efficient homes with reliable, working renters? They could weather the storm.

This is what happens when clueless governments meddle in markets the don’t understand – or want to play politics to a big group of voters.

The result of the Renters’ Reform Bill is that the PRS isn’t waiting around to bend its knee to clumsy government interference – it’s walking away.

Smaller letting firms aren’t the only ones at risk because the big chains are not immune since they have more layers of management to pay.

The only comparison is when online shopping gutted the retail sector – it wasn’t just the independents that crumbled; household-name chains vanished too.

The Renters’ Rights Bill might be sold as being tenant-friendly, but the fallout is a slow-motion car crash for everyone in the private rented sector.

Higher rents, fewer homes and a squeezed middle of agents and landlords – it’s a recipe for chaos.

Letting agencies’ woes could be the first domino to fall, signalling deeper economic tremors across the PRS.

For landlords, the message is clear: adapt or exit.

And for tenants? Brace yourselves – because your rent’s about to go up again.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Comments

  • Member Since October 2023 - Comments: 201

    9:08 AM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Jason at 08/03/2025 – 07:54
    4.5% in the bank, no stress no risk no effort.

  • Member Since February 2022 - Comments: 203

    10:58 AM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by David100 at 08/03/2025 – 09:08
    That’s one option but tax applies after a certain amount and ISA is only £20k per tax year ROI is pretty low too. Anyone staying in property and dipping into commercial lets? Low/No SDLT and no RRB, and no S24.

  • Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 73

    5:51 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Rakesh Joshi at 07/03/2025 – 11:10
    Don’t forget S24 tax liability

  • Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 73

    5:52 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Stella at 07/03/2025 – 11:31
    Don’t. Just sell it unless you want to be even more hands on to the whims of fussy day renters.

  • Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 73

    5:53 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Smallfry at 07/03/2025 – 12:01
    Offer to sell it to her. Give her a discount. Anything just move it on painlessly.

  • Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 73

    5:57 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Jason at 08/03/2025 – 07:54
    Pay the sh@tty tax on inflation based gains.
    Pay off my own mortgage on my house!
    Stuff some in my relatively meagre pension after 40 years of work.
    Have a holiday.
    But some shutters for the windows and hide from Liebour for the next four years.

  • Member Since March 2023 - Comments: 1506

    6:48 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    I would suggest that any BTL investor should put all spare cash into IBSTOCK Bricks, currently at £166.80 a share.

    I have it on good authority that Labour are desperate to tax something new, so on March 26th they are bringing back the windows tax that was repealed in 1851.

    The demand for bricks (for bricking up your windows) will sky rocket.

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1575

    7:42 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Can I ask that landlords sell only to first time buyers and not to new landlords.

    If government wants to end the PRS, we should make sure that’s what happens.

  • Member Since December 2023 - Comments: 1575

    7:48 PM, 8th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    Reply to the comment left by Cider Drinker at 08/03/2025 – 19:42
    And if you sell, spend your money abroad in a country that you respect.

  • Member Since September 2018 - Comments: 3508 - Articles: 5

    9:10 AM, 9th March 2025, About 1 year ago

    everyone is doomed! There are no ‘winners’ as a result of this legislation.

    What it proports to do, is going to be overwhelmed by the negative implications that will come from it.

    Directly or indirectly there will be less rentals available, more than just the existing number of tenants struggling to meet both referencing and affordability requirements, and as a result perhaps the most needy, going to be further ostracised from obtaining private accommodation.

    Crisis – what crisis? This is going to be essentially a full, politically motivated ‘tenant cleansing’ exercise.

    ‘Raising standards, removing barriers to private accommodation entry and more rights for tenants ‘ is all well and good when there is a surplus of housing available and tenants can afford it, but when there isn’t, any policies introduced that say they can, are borne of nothing more than political (vote) winning tactics.

    Let’s hope the good tenants wake up and smell the coffee soon, because as we good landlords know they are going to also pay dearly for the cost of this sledgehammer and point scoring policy.

    Interesting to note that Housing Hand are now raising this exact point – about time tenants realised the implications of all this…..

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