9:58 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago 23
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For many of us, the private rented sector has turned into a battlefield, and at the heart of the latest skirmish is the issue of guarantors – or rather, the call for no tenant to need one.
We have seen 28 organisations, including Shelter, Generation Rent, the Joseph Rowntree Foundation and the renters’ union Acorn, pressing the Labour government to revise the Renters’ Rights Bill.
In an open letter to Housing Secretary Angela Rayner, they warn that the current Bill could prevent poorer tenants from accessing housing in the private rented sector since ‘excessive guarantor demands’ will see landlords unfairly excluding ‘undesirable’ tenants.
To me, having a tenant who doesn’t have to provide a guarantor means they get a golden ticket: no need to rope in a friend or family member to vouch for their reliability.
For landlords, however, it’s a nightmare. When tenants rack up rent arrears or leave properties in tatters, it’s the landlord left footing the bill for repairs and chasing arrears through the (expensive) courts.
So, here’s a radical idea: why don’t tenant activist groups like Shelter – flush with millions in donations every year – step up and do something constructive?
If they’re so confident tenants are paragons of virtue, why not act as guarantors themselves?
Shelter, a charity raking in public money and donations from gullible corporate donors, could transform the rental landscape overnight.
With their war chest, they could underwrite tens of thousands of vulnerable tenants, guaranteeing rent and damages for landlords.
They could even negotiate an insurance package to cover the costs – which would hardly be a stretch for an organisation with their resources. Yet they won’t. Why?
Because Shelter isn’t about solutions; it’s about politics.
As Polly Neate, Shelter’s outgoing chief executive, tweeted this week about leaving her ‘dream job’ of 7.5 years: ‘Boy have I had fun’.
Landlords, grappling with trashed properties and unpaid rent, wouldn’t call the last few years fun. They’d call it a crisis – fill in your own punchline there but Shelter seems content to exploit rather than solve.
I’ve mentioned before that Polly has managed to malign the good name of landlords everywhere without apologising for the slur and without any comeback or criticism for doing so.
The reality is stark: Shelter provides no housing and no direct financial aid to tenants.
Its mission appears laser-focused on demonising landlords, with tenants as little more than pawns in their anti-private-rented-sector campaign.
Alongside anti-landlord councils and groups like Generation Rent and Acorn, Shelter has become a multi-million pound enterprise while offering nothing tangible to the renters they claim to champion.
Instead of stepping up as guarantors or creating a safety net, they’d rather bask in the glow of moral superiority, while pointing a wagging finger at small buy to let landlords for society’s ills.
Let’s be clear: being a landlord isn’t charity work – it’s a job, a business or even a calling for some.
What we are not is a social service.
Private landlords don’t owe anyone a tenancy, especially not tenants with poor credit histories flagged by routine checks.
Would you risk your livelihood on someone who’s already proven unreliable? Of course not.
Yet tenant activists push to ban guarantors and upfront rent, making it harder for landlords to mitigate risk.
Then they feign shock when landlords exit the sector in droves, fed up with tenants who stop paying rent or trash properties – and the glacial eviction process that follows.
Yes, most tenants are decent, but the bad apples leave lasting damage, and landlords need a way to protect themselves.
Take the new laws proposed under the Renters’ Rights Bill: landlords can still evict with four months’ notice to sell a property. Is that secure for tenants? No, but life isn’t secure.
Tenants, meanwhile, can hand in their notice on day one and vanish, leaving landlords in the lurch. Where’s the equality in that?
The government’s one-size-fits-all rules are driving out the majority of landlords who are honourable, leaving the field open for corporate giants to swoop in.
These middle-class cultural Marxists, railing against small landlords, have no clue about what’s coming when the PRS becomes a corporate playground.
At the heart of this mess is viability. No one asks whether a landlord can afford to take on a benefit tenant who might not pay, or a renter who decides rent is optional.
Tenant activist groups loudly demand change, but they house no-one. Not even Shelter whose name would suggest they do.
Instead, these groups destroy the PRS, then wonder why the remaining landlords demand guarantees. Banning guarantors doesn’t help tenants – it just makes it tougher for higher-risk renters to find a willing landlord.
That leaves us with a conundrum as activists cry that ‘landlords are abusing their power’, but what power? A sitting tenant can effectively seize control of a property indefinitely, while landlords jump through legal hoops to reclaim what’s theirs.
This isn’t abuse, it’s a legal mitigation of risk and it’s ludicrous to suggest otherwise.
Activists and leftie MPs harp on about ‘Everyone needs a safe, secure and affordable home’. Fine. But every landlord needs a secure rental income.
Why cap guarantors at six months’ rent when tenancies can last forever?
If Shelter and Generation Rent truly believe tenants are flawless, they should back a nationwide rent-and-damage guarantor scheme.
A government-backed tenancy bond could cover provable losses such as unpaid rent and trashed homes, and if tenants are as reliable as claimed, it’d cost peanuts. They could even save on homelessness budgets.
But they won’t. Landlord-bashing and tax hikes trump solutions every time.
Shelter could step up, using their millions to bridge the gap between tenants and landlords.
They could prove their rhetoric with action.
Instead, they’d rather revel in the ‘fun’ of the fight, as Polly puts it, leaving both sides to suffer.
Landlords aren’t the enemy – and neither are tenants.
The real failure lies with those who’d rather posture than build a system that works.
Until next time,
The Landlord Crusader
Previous Article
DWP could deduct up to 40% of benefits to settle rent arrears
Northern Observer
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Sign Up10:27 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
I was once told by a police officer that burglars generally get caught on a 1:10 ratio. This also translates into poor payers too, not every company (or landlord) owed will take them to court and pay to apply for a CCJ and so what you see by way of a poor credit report is usually the tip of the iceberg and a tenant best avoided.
Mick Roberts
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Sign Up10:27 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Great words Crusader.
On your Are Landlords a Charity comment, I've just had to say this to tenant who's lived there 20+ years as I'm trying to sell all my houses trying to keep the tenants in and prepared to lose 10 to 20k a house to keep them in.
XXX, you've not paid the correct rent as agreed. I would also try to offer the £795 or at least £775 as at moment no Landlords are takers for your house on the low rent you paying v's the value of the house.
I wholly sympathise with your finances, but I can't control what other Landlords have to get to make the numbers work, it's bit silly/emotional/sympathetic of me to accept the lower rent for years & I also can't look after people forever. I shouldn't be losing every year in order for the tenant to have a home, but that's what I've been doing.
If you could get help to pay £895, numbers add up much more for new Landlord I'd say.
Downsize Government
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Sign Up10:43 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
The worst bit, is you are being taxed to fund people actively working against you! Hope can this be right in any way.
There are just so many levels of wrong!
Sheridan Vickers
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Sign Up10:43 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Shelter are just vultures taking money off people who think they're doing good. It's a great idea to suggest they stand in as guarantors and something that should be considered. They won't like that suggestion one bit because they won't be able to pay themselves salaries over £150,000 for doing nothing. They should be made to explain themselves and what they actually do to help people. We could all pick up a phone and ask the council to help a tenant, because that's all they do. Never have they given a penny to a struggling family or thought to help them out. Just take the money and slag off the ones who are providing homes to the public at our risk.
Downsize Government
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Sign Up10:44 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Northern Observer at 28/03/2025 - 10:27
The police in your area catch burglars??!!!
Hard to believe.
If they did, I bet he/she is overstating the ratio, more like 1:100. Most probably aren't even reported.
Reluctant Landlord
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Sign Up10:47 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
‘excessive guarantor demands’
??
Excessive in the sense the LL is asking for one form a potential tenant?
The ability to reduce risk by asking for a guarantor enables a tenancy to be offered, and so works in the tenants FAVOUR not detriment - without one they would fail to achieve a rental.
There would be no need to require one at all if the tenant met the affordability/referencing/rental history/RGI/building insurance requirements etc criteria on their own merits entirely.
The reality is more LL are probably going to demand a guarantor now when before they might not have simply because of the RRB. Ironic or what!
Keep going Ange, council lists will rise as will the temp accommodation bill, and don't forget to remind the tenant again this is all for their benefit...
NewYorkie
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Sign Up11:07 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Reluctant Landlord at 28/03/2025 - 10:47
Tenants need to be reminded that council/housing association housing will be prioritised for asylum seekers and refugees.
Peter Merrick
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Sign Up11:51 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
"Everyone needs a safe, secure and affordable home" is often touted by various do-gooders as a stick to wave at landlords to make them feel obligated to house anybody that needs a roof over their head.
But they forget that, whilst landlords are required to respect human rights, they are not required in any way to supply anybody else's fundamental needs. That is the job of the authorities, who can choose to work with or against would-be providers.
Interesting that some councils are starting almost to beg landlords to help. Maybe this is the first hole in the dam of denial and hostility towards PRS landlords. Certainly BTR and corporate are unlikely to help in any meaningful way.
Northern Observer
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Sign Up11:56 AM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Downsize Government at 28/03/2025 - 10:44
Tbf it was about 25 years ago…
NewYorkie
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Sign Up12:30 PM, 28th March 2025, About 2 months ago
Reply to the comment left by Peter Merrick at 28/03/2025 - 11:51Yet, at the same time, they hit landlords with selective licensing schemes.
Maybe they need to look at a quid pro quo. You scratch my back...