Tenants struggle to find homes as lettings market shifts

Tenants struggle to find homes as lettings market shifts

Illustration of renters and landlords navigating a maze, symbolising shifting power and housing shortages in the rental market.
8:01 AM, 24th June 2026, 3 weeks ago 5

Nine in 10 landlords believe the balance of power in the private rented sector has moved in favour of tenants during the past two years, according to research from LRG.

However, 25% of tenants still believe landlords have the upper hand.

The firm’s Spring 2026 Lettings Report, based on responses from 650 landlords and tenants across England and Wales, found the two groups had sharply different experiences of the same market.

Among landlords, 61% said power had shifted strongly towards tenants and another 28% reported a slight shift.

Just 1% believed it had moved strongly in landlords’ favour.

Legislation supports tenants

The chief lettings officer of Leaders, which is part of LRG, Allison Thompson, said: “What this data shows is that landlords and tenants are both describing the same market accurately; they are just experiencing it from different positions.

“Landlords feel the weight of legislation that has genuinely shifted protections towards tenants.

“Tenants feel the weight of a market where there aren’t enough homes to choose from.

“Both things can be true at once.”

She added: “Solving one without the other will never be enough.”

Most tenants struggle for homes

The changes introduced by the Renters’ Rights Act include the abolition of fixed-term tenancies and Section 21 evictions, as well as restrictions on advance rent payments.

Of those tenants who had searched for a home to rent during the past two years, 78% found fewer suitable choices than they had expected.

Affordability was the main obstacle for 32%, while 22% blamed a lack of available properties.

A further 24% found both prices and availability considerably worse than expected.

Rents outpace affordability

Private tenants in England spend 36.3% of their median household income on rent which is above the 30% affordability threshold.

The rented housing shortage has prevented some tenants from moving.

One in four wanted to change homes during the past 12 months but did not manage to do so.

Of those surveyed, 10% said they could not afford to move and 6% were unable to find a suitable property.

Another 9% considered moving but eventually stayed where they were. Only 5% changed homes during the period.


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Comments

  • Member Since May 2015 - Comments: 2261 - Articles: 2

    10:30 AM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    I bet Shelter’s telephone lines are jammed. They have achieved what they asked for and now must solve all the problems they have created.

  • Member Since July 2013 - Comments: 2048 - Articles: 21

    4:21 PM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    “25% of tenants still believe landlords have the upper hand.”
    Sadly, they need educating. If I may use an analogy, tenants may be happy to drive a Ford or a Kia but the Government has mandated that landlords supply only BMWs and Mercedes. What a surprise! The latter cost more than the former and there are fewer available. Landlords are choosier about whom they let use their asset. The only “upper hand” we have is the law of supply and demand.

  • Member Since October 2022 - Comments: 237

    10:59 PM, 24th June 2026, About 3 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by Ian Narbeth at 24/06/2026 – 16:21
    Exactly, only the best and most decent tenants will have a chance of getting somewhere to call home in future. The fact that any tenant that goes rogue will be dragged through the courts instead of quietly let go with section 21 and never be housed by anybody again means that they will be stupid to try it on. And existing tenants will be stuck where they are as there will be nowhere else to go,.
    So ultimately power will end up in the hands of landlords who know how to handle the new normal.

  • Member Since May 2024 - Comments: 146

    7:27 PM, 27th June 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    I’m sure that many younger home owner’s are finding their mortgage costs above a 30% affordability figure (pulled out of thin air by a think tank). Many will have seen hundreds a month added to their bills with no one to turn to because apparently their vote is not as important..

  • Member Since February 2024 - Comments: 86

    9:59 AM, 29th June 2026, About 2 weeks ago

    Reply to the comment left by Jack Jennings at 19:27
    Generally speaking – of course- Europeans expect to pay approx 40% of their income on housing whether it’s rent or mortgage.. so why a people grumbling here? I am old enough – sadly to remember mortgage rates at 14%, rising to 16% for a month. Now honestly, that was very hard and wages were not keeping up with inflation by any means.

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