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

TODAY'S OTHER NEWS

Victory - rent rises allowed after politicians’ U-turn

Ruling politicians in Scotland have agreed that from April private rents can rise by 3.0 per cent in a 12 month period - and up to 6.0 per cent in certain circumstances.

Since the autumn private rents have been frozen with no increases allowed.

Evictions will still be banned except in the limited circumstances set out in legislation and the rent cap for student accommodation will be suspended "recognising its limited impact on annual rents set on the basis of an academic year".

Advertisement

Although the permitted rent increases are well below inflation, the shift away from the rent freeze represents a victory for campaigners, housing experts and lettings sector trade groups.

Scottish Government tenants and housing minister Patrick Harvie - who last year imposed a complete freeze - says: “Our emergency legislation has helped protect tenants facing the cost of living crisis. With many households still struggling with bills, it is clear that these protections are still needed to give tenants greater confidence about their housing costs and the security of a stable home. 

“While the primary purpose of the legislation is to support tenants, I recognise that costs have been rising for landlords too. 

“That’s why we intend to allow those in the private sector to increase rents by up to 3.0 per cent with a continued safeguard allowing them to apply for larger increases to cover specified rising costs they might be seeing as landlords. By allowing increases in rent – capped well below inflation and limited to once per 12 months – we can continue protecting tenants from the minority of landlords who would impose unaffordable rent hikes. 

“We will continue to carefully monitor the impacts of this legislation, working with tenants and landlords to protect them from this costs crisis.” 

Landlords can apply to Rent Service Scotland to increase rent to partially cover specific costs including increased mortgage interest payments on the property they are letting, an increase in landlords’ insurance or increases in service charges paid as part of a tenancy, subject to an overall limit. 

This limit is currently set at 3.0 per cent of total rent. From April it will be 6.0 per cent.

David Alexander, the chief executive officer of DJ Alexander Scotland Ltd, says: “This shift in policy to allow rent increases in the private rented sector from April onwards is a sensible approach following serious concerns from all parties. 

“This will hopefully provide some breathing space for the private rented sector which has seen investment slow or stop, a reduction in the number of homes available, and increased pressure on tenants who have been unable to find appropriate homes.

“Given the level of feeling from landlords, property investors, the build to rent sector, universities, the farming community, and others that the rent freeze was damaging the sector and reducing the availability of homes for tenants it is appropriate that the Scottish Government has seen sense and adopted a more conciliatory approach. To do anything else would have simply exacerbated the current housing shortages.”

Want to comment on this story? Our focus is on providing a platform for you to share your insights and views and we welcome contributions.
If any post is considered to victimise, harass, degrade or intimidate an individual or group of individuals, then the post may be deleted and the individual immediately banned from posting in future.
Please help us by reporting comments you consider to be unduly offensive so we can review and take action if necessary. Thank you.

  • George Dawes

    Woweee !!!

    6 % in 12 years , that's whats the words ??

    Dystopian Nightmare

    icon

    It’s a typo. Should say 12 months.

     
  • Kevin

    Whilst it is a step in the right direction, there is still no way I would invest in Scotland under these imposed regulations. I suspect they may need to back down further if they want to increase the rental stock. Good that they see the damage they have done though.

  • Simon Scholes

    Crazy. Still a ban on evictions too!!!

  • icon

    Why does the Scottish Government continue to punish the majority of good and decent landlords whist they recognise that it is a minority of bad landlords who are causing harm. Doesn’t seem fair to me!

  • icon

    Who are these bad landlords they refer to? If they know who they are, why are they still allowed to operate?

  • icon

    They need to stop tarring us all with the same brush!

  • icon

    “Our emergency legislation has helped protect tenants facing the cost of living crisis"

    No. You've effectively taxed Landlords, in isolation, to subsidise one individual expense of a subset of the population. Say it how it really is you scum politicians.

  • icon

    A scrap of food for the PRS table, whilst they still have effective control of those landlords properties….. no thanks.

  • icon

    I have a tenant in Lowestoft on the protected tenancy, she has been there since 1958, I am allowed to ask for a rent increase once every 2 yrs, the rent officer sets it, just had it done, I asked for 10% as I considered that best reflected inflation, and also both state pension and benefits are increasing by the full rate of inflation in April, I got an 8.5% increase, I cannot be bothered to argue over 1.5%, but still think the rent should have been increased by the full rate of inflation

  • icon

    Victory???

    Means I can put my rents up by £15/£20 a month while the mortgage Interest goes up by £200 per month.

    They subsidiaries energy companies billions but expect private individuals to subsidies other peoples housing.

    What other sector is price controlled and prevents repossession of assets and worst still is not allowed to deduct finance costs.. I have a number of rental properties in Scotland and have started selling them, reducing available housing who need to rent. I am a good landlord and my tenants appreciate me. This governments broad brush approach due to a few bad apples and a dislike of alternative investments they felt they can't control is simply idiotic. I got in to this as a means to look after myself in my older age, to avoid relying on the state and this is the outcome.. What a bunch of ignorant out of touch *****

    icon

    Couldn’t agree more with everything you've said Peter. It’s an absolute scandal that you work hard, save hard to ensure your self sufficient in your old age and these clowns just come along any take it. It’s politics of envy!
    If they are so concerned about the cost of living why not cap food prices!!

     
    icon

    100% agree . We’re in same position. Seeking retirement investment opportunities outwith Scottish PRS sector now.

     
  • icon

    Victory??

  • icon
    • A JR
    • 20 January 2023 09:30 AM

    Victory! Nope, completely inadequate.
    The abuse of those that provide private housing assets continues along communist lines. Sadly LL’s should leave the sector and invest elsewhere while they still can.

  • icon

    Anthony - Agree, I am mystified why landlords in Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 would stay, it certainly won’t improve over time, so it’s either what we have now… at best, or… it gets worse 🤔 likely.

  • PossessionFriendUK PossessionFriend

    Tell Sturgeon ' we'll see her in the Supreme court, as they over-ruled Barcelona's rent restrictions.

  • icon

    I'm in Scotland and have already sold 2 properties. I have another one going on the market next month and another the following month. That's more tenants for social housing to find homes for. Bang goes my pension but I'd rather sell the whole portfolio than have no control over my hard earned investments. I don't feel there's any turning around now. I'll take the hit with 28% capital gains and re-invest somewhere else....probably not in Scotland! Well done!

    icon

    One has only to observe the Scottish parliament in action , to realise what an utter sub-standard bunch of losers ,are running the country.

     
  • Alan Bonde

    Mr Norwood, your article headline is extremely misleading and gives the events an undeservedly positive spin.
    What U turn?, the situation went from devastating (zero % increase) to merely abysmal (3% increase).
    There is still a ban on evictions, so a tenant who decides on his own private policy of zero % rent payment cannot be evicted, how is that a “Victory”?
    Unless you were meaning a Victory for tenants?
    All the Scots Govt did was to throw a few crumbs to landlords, but it’s still a disaster for Scottish landlords.
    By way of comparison the Property118 headline is much more accurate.
    “Scotland hits landlords with a 3% rent cap”

  • icon

    3% WELL if it wasn't for tenants with nowhere to live they would be enacting legislation to force landlords to reduce rents by 30% and then evicting landlords and their children from their homes to free up space for people who share their agenda
    Of course they would not neglect landlords and their families they would be invited forcefully to occupy cosy camps to be concentrated together while the greens and the three gangs work on the
    "Final solution"to the landlord problem

  • icon

    Mr Altman
    Basically most politicians are, l think communists.who took people's property and killed rich peasants. Stalin killed lots of people and blamed it on WW2. At the moment we have a situation like Syria. The future looks exceedingly grim.

  • icon

    Sorry, I disagree that most politicians are communists, they are an arrogant two faced swindling lot who apply one rule for themselves and another for us the public. I think the best repost to such scoundrel politicians is to tell them to go see the You Tube videos on their expenses saga and how most of them threw their toys out of the pram. There is plenty for them to digest. Also one of the first to admit wrongdoing was the Justice Secretary >> Jack Straw for a false claim on Council Tax!!

icon

Please login to comment

MovePal MovePal MovePal
sign up