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Vast numbers of homes lie empty despite demand for properties

New research shows that 676,000 homes in England are sitting empty.

The research comes from property purchasing firm House Buyer Bureau which measures the number of vacant dwellings up and down England.

Across the country 2.7 per cent of the nation’s stock isn’t utilised, a travesty at a time where supply is so lacking.

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The North East is the worst region for vacant properties, where 3.3 per cent of homes are empty, followed by the North West and Yorkshire and the Humber, where 3.0 per cent isn’t used.

Looking in more detail, Liverpool has the highest proportion of rental stock that’s lying vacant, with 10,769 vacant dwellings out of 229,863, amounting to 4.7 per cent of all stock.

The third and fourth worst areas are also in the North East, as 4.4 per cent of properties are left empty in both Burnley and Blackpool.

England used to have an Empty Homes Programme, which provided funds to social landlords and housing groups to bring empty homes back into use. Individual councils can penalise owners for leaving their properties empty, as the City of London gradually charges owners more council tax the longer they leave them empty.

Greater London makes use of the highest proportion of its stock, as just 2.4 per cent of total dwellings are thought to be sat vacant. 

This puts the capital ahead of areas like the East of England, the South East and the South West, all of which leave 2.5 per cent of their stock unused.

There’s a different trend in Prime areas however, as in the City of London district a sizeable 4.5 per cent of homes are left empty, despite the efforts of the council. This amounts to 351 properties out of 7,775.

The region with the most valuable set of vacant dwellings is the Prime Kensington and Chelsea, where 3,196 dwellings are unused worth £4.3 billion. After that comes another area in the capital, as Camden’s 4,498 empty dwellings are worth £3.73 billion.

In Birmingham there are 13,251 vacant dwellings worth £3.04 billion, while in Leeds 11,861 empty homes have an overall value of £2.85 billion.

Chris Hodgkinson, managing director of House Buyer Bureau, says: “The UK has long struggled to supply enough properties for renters and aspiring buyers, and one factor that doesn’t help is that hundreds of thousands of homes are left picking up dust.

“The problem seems to be especially bad in the North, with Liverpool being one of the worst offenders, while some valuable areas of London are also not being properly utilised.

“To improve the issue of vacant properties the government could sink money into another empty homes scheme, or do more to tax those owners who fail to rent out or use their homes. 

“It’s also fair to assume that with the continued high cost of living and borrowing, coupled with a cooling property market where prices are concerned, we could well see more properties become vacant as the nation’s landlords continue to exit the sector in order to balance their books.”

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  • icon

    Given how the PRS is right now 🤐 who would rent out an empty place if they didn’t have too.

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    I have an empty 3 bed semi since the end of May. I've barely touched it in terms of clearing out the old tenants' stuff (I'm trying to get some deposit back first before I chuck it).

    I can afford to pay the mortgage and not rent it out. Frankly I am too scared to let anyone else in as it will take me 6-9 months to get them out, eviction bans may come in (I never would have entered PRS if that was ever a thing), the toxic RRB, and Labour may be coming....

    I'd rather have an empty house, rather than an occupied house that I may never be able to get back again....

     
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    Nick, Have you thought of letting the 3 bed semi as "serviced accommodation", rather than leaving it empty?

    According to the Shelter website:

    "Services include:

    board

    attendance, such as cleaning of the occupier's room or supplying clean linen

    provision of heating, lighting, supply of hot water

    any other privilege or facility connected with the occupancy of a dwelling other than the supply of cold water or sanitary accommodation

    For a contract to be restricted, the payment for attendances must form a substantial part of the rent. The meaning of 'substantial' is not defined in mathematical terms but indications from case law suggest that 20% and over is substantial and that 10% or less is definitely not substantial.

    Board can mean the provision of one meal, which does not have to be cooked. It has been held that a morning cup of tea is insufficient and there must be more than the provision of groceries. The provision of a daily continental breakfast is sufficient to constitute board."

    From that information, I am assuming that one would need to decide the amount of rent to charge and then add on 20% to 25% to cover the cost of services. Perhaps the 20% to 25% could include council tax? I am not certain about that, but it might be a privilege connected with the dwelling.

     
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    Yet I can park up my car for a year and register it as off road and exempt from road tax.

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    I have one empty, getting ready to go on the market, so likely to be empty for around 4 months or more. And will have another as soon as the court system gets it back for me. That will also sit empty while being brought back to habitable standard (all damages done by the errant tenant) and marketed for sale. They will both be occupied again before too long but not by people looking for rental property.

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    This is Marxist propaganda. A lot is social housing which requires refurbishing between tenants,and then reletting. Further a lot are beyond economic repair and small landlords aren't prepared to buy them and flog themselves to death renovating them to let. Others are properties being sold and in a chain.

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    There are many old un-letable slums in Liverpool, Burnley, Blackburn etc unviable to refurbish and many waiting on Planning for ReDevelopment no point in counting those.
    We know there’s a lot of good property available and not rented, we don’t need a Survey for that, people are too scared to Rent because of The Renter’s Reform Bill the biggest single cause of Homelessness by a Country mile. Thank you Mr Michael Gove Housing Secretary you were able to achieve all this on your own.

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    I have one 3 bed semi empty in East London. I've not touched it since the tenants left. Been on holidays, enjoying the summer. I'm too scared to rent it out again, and the market for sales isn't good so I've just left it....

     
  • John  Adams

    Usual codswallop "research" that fails to understand why a property is vacant aside from the economics of putting tens of thousands into a two up, two down in Horden or Burnley, there is the glaringly obvious reasons of unemployment and crime in these areas. No self respecting family wants to live in an area where you get mugged, your child attacked and your windows smashed all before tea-time. The reality is until the Police do their job and Councils act to evict antisocial elements, these places will remain wastelands. You only have to look to places like Chicago and Detroit to see what happens next.

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    Yes, the report is meaningless if the reason for the empty properties are not investigated. Also, how long are these properties empty, they may just be between tenants for a short time. I guess the figures quoted were just one instant in time, a snapshot.

     
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