Shelter demands action as social housing waiting lists hit 100 years in London

Shelter demands action as social housing waiting lists hit 100 years in London

0:01 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago 19

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Families could face a 100-year wait for social housing in London, new research warns.

Data from the National Housing Federation reveals that in Westminster, some families are facing waits of up to 107 years for a three-bedroom social home.

Housing charity Shelter is urging the government to tackle the crisis by committing to build 90,000 social homes a year for the next decade.

Number of families on waiting list has increased

According to the National Housing Federation, the number of families on waiting lists in England has increased by 37% since 2015, six times the rate of the waiting list overall.

In 32 local authorities across England, the wait is now longer than an entire childhood (18+ years), with the worst three councils, all of which are in London (Westminster, Enfield and Merton), having waiting lists exceeding a hundred years.

Local authorities across England have placed people into temporary accommodation to keep waiting lists down.

According to the latest government figures, a record 164,040 children are homeless and stuck in damaging temporary accommodation, double the number in 2012,  and one in every six children is living in an overcrowded home.

Social housing sector has faced years of withdrawal of vital funding

Kate Henderson, chief executive of the National Housing Federation, says the long wait time are a “national scandal”.

She said: “The fact that families in so many parts of the country face waiting lists for an affordable home longer than their children’s entire childhood is a national scandal.

“Security, stability and the space to learn and play is vital for a child’s development, yet we are allowing hundreds of thousands of children to grow up in damaging temporary homes, in cramped and poor-quality conditions and with little privacy. This is no way for a child to grow up and these children deserve better.

“The social housing sector has faced years of withdrawal of vital funding. The upcoming Spending Review is the opportunity for the government to rebuild the capacity of the social housing sector and commit the investment and the change that is needed, creating a better future for our children and ending homelessness for good.

“This means delivering coordinated homelessness and long-term housing strategies which include a package of measures to support the social housing sector to recover and crucially a big boost in funding to build new social homes.”

Building 90,000 social homes a year for a decade

Shelter claims to meet demand more than 90,000 social homes would need to be built each year to meet demand, more than ten times the current rate.

Mairi MacRae, director of policy and campaigns at Shelter, said: “Decades of failure to build genuinely affordable social homes has left our housing system in tatters and trapped families in a relentless cycle of insecurity and homelessness. No child should grow up without a safe, stable home, but today, more than 164,000 children are spending their formative years in damaging and often dangerous temporary accommodation.

“Every day our frontline services hear from desperate parents forced into impossible situations. Families squeezed into single room temporary accommodation, with nowhere for children to play or do homework. Key workers uprooted from their jobs and communities because there are simply no homes they can afford nearby. Childhoods are being lost to homelessness and it’s costing the country billions.

“The June Spending Review is the government’s chance to right this wrong. By committing to serious investment in social housing – building 90,000 social homes a year for a decade – we can end the housing emergency, save public money, and give every child the foundation they need to thrive.”

According to Shelter, social rents are 69% more affordable than private rents, with social tenants in England paying on average £947 less per month in rent than private tenants.


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Cider Drinker

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8:37 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Let’s be honest about the cause of homelessness. Only then will we be able to fix the problem.

The problem won’t be fixed by building more homes. It won’t be fixed by turning family homes in to HMOs.

Nikki Palmer

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10:54 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Do Shelter really believe that social housing is the way forward?

Perhaps they shouldn't have created so much damage in the PRS

Sheridan Vickers

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11:21 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Well done to Shelter and all the other useless charities for causing more homelessness and basically mucking up the whole rental system for tenants and landlords. A lot of the ignorant are backing these sham charities and are duping people who actually think they are housing people. All they are doing is slagging off landlords who do house people and this is unacceptable. It's about time Shelter and the others stuck their hands in their pockets and start acting like charities and spend some of that money on vulnerable people instead of paying themselves massive salaries.

Northernpleb

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11:35 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

It`s going to get a lot worse . Renter Reform Bill.
The Government, and Councils has made being a private Landlord very un-appealing.

Reluctant Landlord

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11:39 AM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

They have been key in helping this crisis happen. Funny how they now see its someone else's problem to sort out the mess they have contributed to....

TheMaluka

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13:06 PM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Long may Shelter continue their campaign against private landlords. Shelter has been the determining force which has enabled me to increase rents by 40% over the last few years - and more increases to come.

NewYorkie

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13:43 PM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Until they 'smash the gangs' this problem will only get worse.

Judith Wordsworth

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14:33 PM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

With asylum seekers now being given priority on LA housing lists I'm surprised it is only a 100 years wait.

When is Joe and Joanna Public going to start waking up?

Raz

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15:55 PM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Shelter’s total income was £57.5m, yet they're claiming a deficit of 2.3m.
At the same time the chief executive of Shelter was paid £128,000 during the year, and the charity’s divisional directors are all paid £84,660 a year.

Are charities ever held accountable for their spending?
Imagine how many homes could have been built with £50m?

NewYorkie

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16:10 PM, 22nd April 2025, About a month ago

Reply to the comment left by Raz at 22/04/2025 - 15:55
What do they spend it on?

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