600,000 Landlords Set to Quit Buy to Let

Hundreds of thousands of landlords are considering quitting buy-to-let due to the increasing time and costs of renting a home. 

Around 600,000 landlords - just over 40% of the country’s 1.3 million buy-to-let investors - are considering selling up, according to research by insurer LV= July 2019

They blame losing tax relief on mortgage payments, the switching costs to run a tenancy from renters to landlords under the tenant fees ban and the likely abolition of Section 21 no-fault evictions as the main reasons for their uncertainty about carrying on. 

Another factor is the ongoing cost of managing a property, which the insurer suggests is up to £3,100 a year for every home rented out  - a staggering £4.7 billion a year across the sector. 

Top of the spending list are building work (£370), boiler repairs (£370), fixing structural damage (£313), decorating (£265), and gardening (£203). 

Most landlords say tenants damage carpets (66%), with walls (45%), white goods (27%) and doors (24%) also high on the list. 

The most expensive repairs are flooring (£322), white goods (£298), cleaning at the end of a tenancy (£178) and clearing possessions left when tenants move out (£149). 

Some of these costs are covered by landlord insurance, but one in eight landlords (13%) do not have any cover. 

The survey found that sorting out maintenance and damage can sour the relationship between landlords and tenants. 

A third of landlords confess they are stressed by bad tenants, although 46% have never had a dispute with a tenant, a quarter have a dispute once a year and 6% once a month. 

The most common disputes are overpaying rent late (43%), damages (41%), keeping homes clean (33%), disputes over bills or deposits (10%), pets (9%) and sub-letting (7%).

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Investing in a Property

Investing in a private rented property can be achieved in a variety of ways. Sometimes landlords inherit a property that they then turn over to renting. Sometimes owners of properties become unintentional landlords because they are unable or unwilling to sell a property at the value the market currently dictates.