x
By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies to enhance your experience.
Graham Awards

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

Furnished v Unfurnished - research shows city premiums for furniture

New research shows how the rental premium for a furnished property compares to the cost of furnishing a rental home individually.

The exercise, conducted by Manor Interiors, looks particularly at accommodation in key university locations. 

It shows that:

Advertisement

- The average student could be facing as much as £1,796 to adequately furnish a rental home while at university;

- However, a furnished property does carry a renal premium and Cardiff is home to the highest where the average rent price is £746 per month but the furnished premium is an average of seven per cent. This equates to an additional cost of around £52 a week, or £627 a year, to rent a furnished home instead of an unfurnished home;

- But when this is measured against the cost of kitting out an unfurnished home (£1,796), a fully-furnished flat is actually the more affordable option, saving Cardiff students an average of £1,169;

- In Coventry, the premium for a furnished flat is 15 per cent or £1,283 a year. Compared to the average cost of furnishing a home, this is a saving of £513 a year;

- In Edinburgh, a premium of 10 per cent makes furnished homes an average of £1,320 a year more expensive. When measured against the cost of furnishing a home, this is a saving of £476 a year;  

- As for the availability of fully furnished rented homes, at the top of the table is Edinburgh where 94 per cent of the rental homes currently on the market are fully furnished;

- In Coventry, 92 per cent of the market is fully furnished; in Birmingham and Newcastle, it’s 91 per cent; in Leeds it’s 89 per cent; Cardiff 88 per cent; and Sheffield 84 per cent of the rental market is fully furnished.

 

Farhan Malik, chief executive of Manor Interiors, says: “Students want ease and convenience when moving into a new home - they don’t want to have to bother going out and buying all of the furniture they require, especially if they’re only planning on being in the home for a year, or maybe two.

“But they also don’t want to spend unnecessary money, which means they’re often tempted by what seems like the cheaper option of unfurnished homes.

“This data tells us that, over the course of a year, it’s actually cheaper, sometimes much cheaper, to opt for a fully furnished home.

“Even if you live in Birmingham where the average saving of £13 a year seems insignificant - many of us have been students before, and by the end of the year, an additional £13 in the current account is actually a pretty big deal, it’s a night in the pub, for example.

“Furthermore, when it comes to moving out of shared student housing, having to dismantle and move all of that furniture you’ve brought can be a real pain, especially if it was purchased as a household of people now going their separate ways.”

Want to comment on this story? If so...if any post is considered to victimise, harass, degrade or intimidate an individual or group of individuals on any basis, then the post may be deleted and the individual immediately banned from posting in future.

  • George Dawes

    I've always found furnished to be more trouble than it's worth what with all this continually invasive regulation red tape stuff they keep inventing

  • icon

    I have always let furnished but now its a disadvantage more are coming saying they have there own, if its not their first time renting. I have lost 2 house let’s this year because of this they wanted me to take furniture away, where on Earth was I going to put it. There is no premium for being furnished just a disadvantage, charging the same or more, they have too much crap of their own, same goes for white good putting additional legal responsibility on you by Regulators I have stopped giving them kettles & toasters so the interference is damaging everything, let them bring in their own second hand bug infested furniture.

    icon

    I supply a cheap cooker, that's it now and often they are too dirty to bother cleaning when tenants leave

     
  • icon

    The numbers in the article all ignore that students are typically there for 3 years. Even if not in the same flat they only have to by one lot of furniture, so in Cardiff, it's about break even (£28/year saving) and everywhere else furnished is much more expensive (Coventry £684/year, Edinburgh £721/year), according to the figures given.

    icon

    I noticed that.

    Perhaps they think the furniture will be totally trashed within the first year?

    Not wrong in many cases!

    However an other case of sloppy journalism mixing up annual and longer term costs.

     
  • icon

    Andrew, I used to do that too difficult to clean and it would at least be compliant for a year when new. However not possible anymore because of Council HMO Regulations, they required me to put in a Double Range Cooker / oven + 8 burner hob for 6 persons License, that’s a £1’000.00 + the Extractor 1m wide Hood to go with it £400.00 so can’t be thrown away lightly, never the less in one property I am on the third one which is so expensive, of course the Tenants didn’t need it, its the Council’s idea, just like the second kitchen sink they required in the same kitchen. I have a few of those so they fill both with Crockery and leave them there. They have imposed huge costs and Labour on me for no good reason, then I have to run around after everyone 7 days a week, supply everything, fix everything, try and collect the Rent, pay the tax, Accountancy, Insurance’s, then HMO Application Licensing fees for Council now £1310 to £1420. + all the additional Certificates now required for nothing other than to line you up for a further big fine and give you a Criminal Record, does anyone want to tell me seriously that we are not being stitched up, give us some credit, Incidentally it only applies to some sections of the Community, did some one mention Discrimination.

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up