The landlord exodus continues, but no one in power seems to care

The landlord exodus continues, but no one in power seems to care

Knight-themed Landlord Crusader logo symbolizing landlord advocacy
9:10 AM, 11th April 2025, 12 months ago 27

Another week, another set of grim headlines for the UK’s landlords, yet the national news remains eerily silent on the issue.

On Property118, three stories paint a stark picture of a private rented sector in crisis, with landlords leaving in droves.

If policymakers and housing ministers like Matthew Pennycook – and even the Conservative shadow housing minister Baroness Taylor in the Lords – choose to ignore this trend, they do so at their peril.

They might plead ignorance over the facts or want evidence of a landlord exodus, but the consequences could be catastrophic, not just for landlords but for tenants, communities and the economy.

Prime landlords quit

First, an analysis from Knight Frank, reveals that London’s most sought-after lettings markets are in upheaval.

Landlords are offloading prime properties in response to the impending Renters’ Rights Bill, which promises stricter eviction rules and heightened risks for rent arrears.

Combined with tougher Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) requirements and soaring mortgage rates, the Bill is already prompting sales, reducing availability and inevitably pushing rents higher.

If landlords with prime properties can’t make the numbers work, who can?

Landlords consider leaving

The situation isn’t limited to London’s elite areas. Aldermore’s research shows that nearly one in three landlords is considering quitting the PRS altogether.

Escalating maintenance costs, tougher regulations and, again, the looming Renters’ Rights Bill are driving this exodus.

Worryingly, 34% of landlords cite soaring maintenance costs as their primary concern, matched by an equal number worried about the Bill’s impact.

Nearly a third have already started selling properties, exacerbating the scarcity of rental homes.

Demand outstrips supply

Propertymark’s Housing Insight report adds to the alarm with tenant demand continuing to outstrip supply, with an average of 10 applicants per available property at member branches.

Landlords, already under pressure, are leaving and Propertymark says they are increasingly worried about the Bill, which could become law by summer.

As supply dwindles and demand spikes, the pressure on rents will only intensify.

Government to blame

This growing trend of landlords selling up isn’t new, but it appears to be accelerating – and it’s entirely down to government policies.

Take Section 24, for instance, which makes renting more expensive by taxing landlords on turnover rather than profit, effectively turning them into unpaid tax collectors for the government.

Then there’s the frozen Local Housing Allowance (LHA), set significantly below the 30th percentile it’s supposed to reflect.

Rents might be high, but landlords aren’t profiting.

We struggle with tax burdens, mortgage interest, maintenance costs and insurance which are rising faster than inflation, squeezing margins to breaking point.

All the while negative media stories about us proliferate.

Landlord critics

Organisations like Shelter and Generation Rent, often vocal critics of landlords, are part of the problem too.

They need a quick lesson in economics rather than carrying out surveys and campaigns that demonise landlords, yet they do little, or nothing, to provide actual roofs over heads.

The irony is palpable: these groups claim everyone deserves a safe, secure place to live without sacrifice, but it’s landlords who make all the sacrifices – only to be labelled as ‘rogue’ enemies.

The government and these advocacy groups seem determined to ignore basic economics.

Anti-landlord policies, increased regulation and taxation are driving landlords and their rental properties out of the market.

The only realistic solution is for policymakers to shift their mindset toward supportive policies for landlords.

If costs to landlords fall and supply increases, rents would naturally drop.

It’s simple supply and demand, yet the government appears wilfully blind to this simple fact.

When landlords leave

If this trend continues unchecked, the future is bleak.

I’ve told critics that they should wait until most private landlords have sold up to banks and housing associations.

Rents could double or triple as the market consolidates into a few monopolistic giants, much like the energy and water companies have done.

Regular maintenance will become a rarity, you just have to look at what is happening to social and council homes, and the right to be housed could devolve into the right to a cardboard box on the street.

Sadly, we’ve been here before – in the 1970s, when rental availability plummeted. History warns us: be careful what you wish for.

Homelessness will grow

Critics might argue that homes don’t disappear – they’re just sold or bought by larger landlords. But who benefits?

This is an unpalatable opinion for many people, but it appears increasingly to be true: often, those benefitting are those who’ve recently arrived in the country.

They’ve been handed safe, decent homes while long-term residents end up in homeless accommodation for a long time.

In London, the social housing waiting list is more than 100 years while social media carries footage of someone being prioritised and getting a home after just two weeks in the country.

That is simply wrong.

The government, Shelter and Generation Rent may think they’re champions of tenants, but their policies are fuelling a slippery slope toward widespread homelessness.

Landlords, the wake-up call is here.

We need policymakers to take real action, not turn a blind eye.

The PRS is on the brink, and without change, we’re all headed for a housing crisis none of us can afford.

Until next time,

The Landlord Crusader


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Comments

  • Member Since June 2014 - Comments: 1562

    9:44 AM, 13th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by RC-HMO at 13/04/2025 – 08:42
    .. Maybe I’m missing something here !

    Rent controls. They destroyed the UK rental market for decades.

    Demand was sky high but no one would (legally) fill it.

    History repeats itself.

  • Member Since May 2014 - Comments: 616

    10:25 AM, 13th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by RC-HMO at 13/04/2025 – 08:42
    You are not taking on board the possibility of never getting your property back and the ability of tribunals to curtail rent increases and even reduce rents once the tenant has moved in.

    In the upcoming RRB the government have very cleverly set out the framework for this to happen.

    Firstly not even the NRLA can tell me that we can get our property back with vacant possession when we want to sell so why then have we been fed the line that this will just be a matter of giving the appropiate notice to the tenant when the likelyhood is that it will not be a mandatory ground.

    It was not a mandatory ground in the previous consevative version of the RRB either, we would have had to rely on a Judge to tell us what we could do with our own property.
    This left wing government are going further they are also trying to introduce a hardship clause to make it even more difficult.

    The result of all this could be having to sell with a sitting tenant at a greatly reduced price and possibly having to find a cash buyer.
    This for me outweighs the advantages of staying in the market.
    Hopefully some amendments to the bill will address these issues but I will not hold my breath.

  • Member Since October 2020 - Comments: 3

    11:49 AM, 13th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by Stella at 13/04/2025 – 10:25
    I’d totally agree, hence my comment re non standard BTL. I’ll happily let housing associations and local councils house tenants on standard ASTs, due to the issues you’ve pointed out. Personally I have been moving my HMOs to Government contracts, selling single lets, retaining and refurbing Short term lets, renting direct to Housing providers etc. The local housing allowance rates have increased by 25% so if you keep inline with these the rent controls won’t be an issue. I’d imagine if you’re a accidental landlord with one or two houses on standard ASTs you may want to sell up but if you have a portfolio of residential, commercial, holiday lets , HMOs etc you would need to think very carefully before selling up.

    If you’re at retirement age I’d imagine the deiscision would be a lot easier. Why wouldn’t you ? My old man always said there was no such thing as easy money and these changes prove that. If anyone knows differently do let me know 🙂

  • Member Since June 2014 - Comments: 1562

    12:27 PM, 13th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by RC-HMO at 13/04/2025 – 11:49
    “The local housing allowance rates have increased by 25%”

    LHA rates have been frozen until at least April 2026. Rents have already increased 10%+ since then.

  • Member Since November 2017 - Comments: 261

    8:58 AM, 14th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by RC-HMO at 13/04/2025 – 11:49
    If your near or past retirement age using the capital realised from selling to buy an annuity is becoming an attractive option. It does depend where in the country you are, but in Berkshire a 2 bed apartment sells for around £240,000 and rents for about £15,000pa. By the time you’ve sold, paid company tax, withdrawn the lump sum as repayment of the initial capitalisation loan, you’ve got about £200,000 left.

    Annuity rates vary, but a single person, on a 3% pa increment for life can get about £7,000 pa for £100,000. So invest your £200,000 and you’re getting £14,000pa guaranteed for life, incrementing by 3% each year without any worries. Figures vary if your structuring it to support your partner after you die. One key point, buying an annuity from capital, not a pension pot, does not affect your future pension situation in any way.

    The issue is your kissing bye bye to your capital, on the positive side it places it out of reach of social care funding, (although they’ll take the annuity payments while your in care, any arrangements made for your partners support after your death are unaffected).

  • Member Since January 2024 - Comments: 341

    5:53 PM, 14th April 2025, About 12 months ago

    “Take Section 24, for instance, which makes renting more expensive by taxing landlords on turnover rather than profit, effectively turning them into unpaid tax collectors for the government.”

    This is factually inaccurate. Income tax is on PROFITS (not turnover) before interest/finance charges, and could be at rates in excess of 20%. Interest/finance charges are only a 20% tax credit, so you could be paying tax, even though you are making a loss after interest/finance charges.

    Example – £50000 profits before interest @ 40%=£20000 tax, less £50000 interest @ 20% = £10000 tax credit. So you could be paying £10000 tax on zero profit!

  • Member Since August 2023 - Comments: 24

    8:56 PM, 23rd April 2025, About 12 months ago

    Reply to the comment left by russell branch at 11/04/2025 – 09:31
    It was the Tories who started the war on private landlords. Labour might want to abolish private property but the Tories also hate the plebs acquiring assets. In both cases it’s about control. Control by the state by Labour or control by the elite under the Tories.

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