Buy to Let Standards Are Still Lacking

Official data in 2018 paints a big picture of a rosy future for buy-to-let, but the small details are letting landlords down. 

Although buy-to-let accounts for a fifth of all homes, with landlords owning 4.9 million properties and earning an average of £15,000 a year from rents, some living standards are still below par, according to the government’s English Housing Survey. 

Standards are improving, but private rented homes still lag owner-occupied and social housing properties for the worst overcrowding, lack of energy efficiency and poor living conditions. 

The survey reveals that 392,000 rented properties (8%) fail the government’s decent homes standard, which lays down guidelines for the minimum state of repair and safety for housing. 

“Private rented dwellings were, on average, older and therefore more likely to have defects to the damp proof course, roof covering, gutters, or downpipes, which could lead to problems with rising or penetrating damp affecting at least one room in the property,” says the survey.

 Around 186,000 rented homes suffer from condensation or mould, even though the number improved from 294,000 in the last report. 

The survey also shows that buy-to-let homes have lower energy efficiency ratings than the rest of the housing stock. 

“The social sector was more energy efficient than the private sector, partly due to wider wall insulation use and dwelling type. In particular, the social sector contained a higher proportion of flats, with less exposed surface area (external walls and roofs) through which heat can be lost, than detached or semi-detached houses,” said the survey. 

Another reason for energy efficiency failings is private rented homes are older and harder to insulate, and around 16% do not have central heating. 

Read the English Housing Survey.

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Repairs, Maintenance and Fitness for Habitation

In addition to any repair responsibilities explicitly set out in the agreement, common law and statute will imply terms to the agreement