Tell me again why landlords should persist in a PRS rigged against them

Tell me again why landlords should persist in a PRS rigged against them

9:29 AM, 5th December 2025, About 2 months ago 24

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I think the kids call it doom scrolling, when you can’t stop reading negative news stories and comments on social media.

In my case, the landlords on X/Twitter have had a field day after the Budget and its potential impact.

I made a crack last week about getting those landlords who don’t engage with what’s happening to wake up.

They obviously haven’t done so, but there’s a timebomb heading our way and when it explodes, it will be too late.

Why do we remain?

We are all worried about the mounting financial and regulatory pressures and Rachel’s Budget has amplified these concerns.

With most posts reflecting on profitability issues and the disaster that is the Renters’ Rights Act, it’s time to ask a serious question.

Why do landlords continue working in this environment? We offer homes and we work and pay taxes.

Obviously, we now pay more under Labour and some of us will be worried that our pension plans have taken a knock.

It never used to be like this. The appeal of buy to let investment was once compelling, especially in the 1990s and early 2000s.

That’s when we had favourable tax treatments, strong rental yields and high tenant demand which enabled us to build portfolios to save for our futures.

And the futures of our children too.

2% property tax rise

Our properties represented tangible assets, offering control and potential for long-term growth.

However, the landscape has been profoundly transformed.

The 2% increase in property income tax from 2027, frozen personal allowances until 2030-31, will hurt profitability.

The government’s framing of these measures as promoting ‘fairness’ belies their impact: they disproportionately burden the 2.4 million landlords in the PRS, which houses nearly five million households.

This is not a balanced policy; it is a targeted disincentive for private investment in housing.

Industry surveys reveal that 90% of landlords anticipate passing on costs through higher rents, which should be obvious, even to Labour politicians.

And this is happening with the RRA’s restrictions on in-tenancy rent increases, the need for six months’ notice and mandatory pet permission.

These reforms bring administrative overheads and introduce operational uncertainties, leading many landlords to reassess their business models.

Landlord incentives disappear

On top of that, the fines for non-compliance could see an entire investment’s profit disappear.

No-one can explain what happens when the courts are stuffed and tenants lodge claims against rent rises.

I’ve said before this process has brought in a rent cap via the back door because the Tribunal will look at local market rates.

Good luck with that.

Then we have the joy of meeting the Making Tax Digital requirements from next April.

This is a process of death by a thousand cuts because it’s not always the headline news that hurts: it’s usually the small announcements.

But it can’t all be bad, can it?

I read on landlord forums that many are in the process of selling or have sold up.

But the PRS keeps on expanding.

There must be a new landlord reading this who can explain why they think the PRS is such a good investment prospect.

I’d love to know, and I’m sure those who have had properties for years would appreciate that input.

PRS is a political football

For me, the risks of losing everything has grown too much.

The unannounced council visits to find issues and handing out huge fines is hard to stomach when many council properties are a disgrace.

The PRS has undoubtedly become a political football, but landlords have managed to be dropped from both teams!

We are at the back of the stands, being drowned out by the noise made by tenant activist groups.

I love reading on landlord forums about how things were in the 1970s. It sounds almost unbelievable, but we appear to be going back there.

Now it looks like landlords need to start looking at portfolio restructuring and incorporation for efficiency.

Should we also be looking into diversification into less regulated segments like commercial property?

But here again I’m looking at the inescapable consequence of inaction.

Wait for tax bills

By January 2027, self-assessment tax demands will arrive, bringing into sharp, hideous focus the Budget’s full impact.

The 2% rate adjustment, compounded by static income tax thresholds, will hurt.

Capital gains on disposals, taxed at up to 28%, will compound losses for those landlords who belatedly decide to sell.

While I want to remain committed to the PRS, I’m left with the inescapable feeling that the window for a strategic retreat is slowly closing.

So, why persist? The PRS apparently no longer rewards resilience but punishes it.

Selling now still offers a dignified path to financial security, unencumbered by an evolving regulatory nightmare world.

We were told that good landlords have nothing to fear from the Renters’ Rights Act. I’d like to believe that’s true, but I’m not so sure.

Perhaps someone, anyone, can help convince me otherwise?

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Keith Wellburn

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Member Since March 2024 - Comments: 274

18:47 PM, 5th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 05/12/2025 – 18:40
I think it was surcharged at 28% by Osborne not Hunt, Hunt just reducing to 24%.

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Smiffy

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Member Since December 2021 - Comments: 160

23:09 PM, 5th December 2025, About 2 months ago

I am desperately trying to find a way forward.

The 2% tax increase is neither here, nor there, to be honest, the effect of it can be recovered through a rent increase.

It’s all the other stuff, the ombudsman, the database and when it comes to my area, selective licencing. I never signed up for all this 35 years ago when I started. None of it is new, everything they cover, is already covered.

What is stopping me selling?

Well, CGT is one thing, but having compiled a rough spreadsheet to see how renting compares to my shares portfolio, taking the hit is becoming attractive.

What else? Well, we’ve got long standing, good tenants, that have been with us for years, one has been nearly 30 years. How do I tell her, “I’ve had enough, here’s a S21, now bugger off!”

It seems out of me, the govt, I’m the only one with a conscience.

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Dylan Morris

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Member Since August 2016 - Comments: 1190

23:33 PM, 5th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Smiffy at 05/12/2025 – 23:09
Stick with it if you’ve got good tenants. If you want to sell do it when they leave.

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Smiffy

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Member Since December 2021 - Comments: 160

8:26 AM, 6th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at 05/12/2025 – 23:33
That certainly is the plan at the moment, I’m hoping there’s just a lot of scaremongering going on and once we get into it, those of us with good tenants will just jog along as we were.

Although all this extra cost is going to have to come from somewhere and as the only revenue source is the tenants, it’s them that will suffer.

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Keith Wellburn

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Member Since March 2024 - Comments: 274

8:28 AM, 6th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Dylan Morris at <a href="05/12/2025″ rel=”ugc”>https://www.property118.com/tell-me-again-why-landlords-should-persist-in-a-prs-rigged-against-them/comment-page-2/#comment-199914“>05/12/2025 – 23:33Also don’t overlook the option of selling with tenants in situ. I actually sold at a premium over VP for some of my student lets (the area had an Article 4 restriction over creating new ones) and where possible I sold my family lets with good tenants in situ for good prices despite the rents behind a little behind the market. Wasn’t possible with them all, houses in need of a refurb or the tenant who had turned into a compulsive hoarder.

My last house has tenants of over twenty years and I’ve been in the game 35 years so no spring chicken with unlimited time to wait for VP. I’ve already told them I may be selling but it will be with them in situ as a first option if they wish. Admittedly a sub £100k property and I’m bringing the rent up to nearer market value in preparation.

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Keith Wellburn

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Member Since March 2024 - Comments: 274

8:47 AM, 6th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Keith Wellburn at 06/12/2025 – 08:28
The irony is that before the RRA I offered a new AST to good tenants on my family lets of up to two years duration if they wanted to give them that period of security after the sale to a new LL. (I normally just let initial 6 month ASTs become periodic which was never a problem for any tenants I encountered).

Obviously the maximum security for tenants in that situation is now below the two years under the RRA.

It will be a long and painful process as the litany of unintended consequences created by a clueless political class cheered on by angry tenant activist groups plays out hurting a swathe of tenants as the smaller landlords leave and corporate players cherry pick the best financial returns in the best areas.

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Judith Wordsworth

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Member Since January 2015 - Comments: 1389

10:02 AM, 6th December 2025, About 2 months ago

Reply to the comment left by Crouchender at 05/12/2025 – 13:54
I saw the writing on the wall when the Renters Reform Bill rose its head and implemented the exit.

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GlanACC

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Member Since March 2023 - Comments: 1486

9:43 AM, 7th December 2025, About 2 months ago

If you don’t have a mortgage (like me), then you are in a much better position to survive the RRB.

Otherwise upcoming costs and taxes are going to kill you.

I saw this coming many years ago, even before the introduction of S24 — I sold 12 of my properties to pay of the motrgaes for the remaining 6 (I still have 5 now).

I think if you run an HMO then you are in an even worse predicament.

No more tenants for me, when they leave I will sell.

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Peter Merrick

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Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 190

11:16 AM, 7th December 2025, About 2 months ago

You have to understand the hidden messages of politicians. It’s what they don’t say that really matters.

What they say: “Good landlords have nothing to fear”.

What they don’t say is what they define as a “good landlord’.

The truth is that they don’t believe that there is such a thing as a “good landlord”, at least in the PRS. To them it’s an oxymoron.

A bit like the way they bandy about the term “working people” but struggle to define it, only rather more cynical in this case.

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Jack Jennings

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Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 89

11:31 AM, 7th December 2025, About 2 months ago

The fact that CGT for property has not even been discussed let alone increased tells me all I need to know. The government is hell bent on getting rid of unincorporated landlords (probably at the bequest of the corporate sector) and has left this back door open on purpose. When the big boys fail to deliver on anything other than luxury apartments and we get the figures on Labour’s 1.5 million target (sod all) it will be low income tenants who will suffer.
It has been said that most landlords don’t have to be landlords but renters without a reasonable deposit have to be renters. This will be a bigger kick in the mouth for those people rather than us.

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