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Landlords improve big majority of their rental homes - survey

Landlords have helped drive an improvement in standards in privately rented property, with four in five upgrading each rental home they purchase.

A study by Paragon Bank, a buy to let mortgage specialist, found that 81 per cent of landlords make improvements on every property they add to their portfolio.

The survey of over 500 landlords found 22 per cent of landlords spend over £25,000 on upgrading a new portfolio property, with 18 per cent spending between £10,000 and £20,000.

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On average, landlords expect to see a 19.8 per cent increase in the property’s value after completing upgrade work, with a 16.5 per cent increase in expected rental income.

The research found that 40 per cent of landlords prefer to purchase property in need of refurbishment, with 21 per cent opting for properties that are ready for tenants to move into.

The private rented sector has experienced a significant improvement in the standard of homes over the past 15 years, correlating with the growth of buy to let finance.

In 2008, 44 per cent of homes in the sector were defined as non-decent according to the Government’s English Housing Survey. Today, that figure stands at 23 per cent.

The addition of good quality homes has diluted the presence of poorer stock; In 2008, 1.8m privately rented homes were classed as decent, rising to 3.3m in 2021 – an 83 per cent increase. 

There has also been a reduction in the number of properties classed as non-decent – falling from 1.4m to 990,000, a 29 per cent reduction.

Richard Rowntree, Paragon Bank Managing Director of Mortgages, says: “Landlords have helped improve standards across the private rented sector over the past 15 years and the upgrading of stock they purchase is central to that.

“The vast majority of landlords will look to upgrade each new property to boost the capital value and the potential rental income. However, they also do this out of a genuine desire to provide a good quality home to their tenants.”

Asked why landlords make improvements to property, 83 per cent of landlords said they did so to ensure they are providing a good quality home to tenants, with 82 per cent doing so to make the property more attractive to tenants. Two thirds upgrade property to improve rental income and 57 per cent look to increase the capital value. Meanwhile, nearly half upgrade property for energy efficiency reasons.

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    Well that doesn't fit the narrative of the ant-LL brigade does it?

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    • K B
    • 22 March 2023 07:55 AM

    I have improved every property that I have bought to a standard that I would be happy to live in

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    I love renovating properties and making them into comfortable, durable, desirable long term rental homes.
    Over the years I've bought numerous truly unfortunate flats and houses that have required extensive work to make them habitable. Probate sales, repossessions, a large house where squatters had just been evicted, flats with no heating or hot water and a lease too short to mortgage, an old terraced house with a total of. 4 electric sockets and the bath was in the coal shed, several that were so squalid the estate agent waited outside while we viewed, etc.
    None of them were FTB territory. It's questionable how many would even have been legal to let at the point of purchase.
    In the early days I'd renovate them, let them for 3 or 4 years and then sell so I could buy something else. Those properties were all bought by FTBs or second steppers. Back then the tax system made that sort of thing possible but now with the extra 3% SDLT and no relief on CGT it simply isn't viable to take that middle road. It's either buy to flip immediately or buy to let long term.

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    Ditto Jo, none of mine would have been suitable for a FTB or mortgageable, and I also have enjoyed getting down and dirty renovating them

     
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    Landlords have more imagination and foresight than typical FTB owners, take risks and work hard to improve properties which others wouldn't dare buy..

    I've often bought properties where on the way in I was almost knocked down by snowflakes rushing out who couldn't see beyond the squalor and damage.

    The 3 second homes I have owned had all been shunned by locals who thought I was mad buying them. Those same locals now complain about holiday home owners who had more foresight than them.

    Perhaps we could get Shelter to sponsor a Landlord Oscars for the most improved rental properties?

     
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    I am improving my properties. I am evicting the tenants.

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    I once dared to say to my wife that we could easily brighten up the room we were in.

    I asked her to go out to the garden and look through the window.

    I then told her the room seemed brighter as soon as she had left it.

    She didn't laugh!

     
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    Mmm. Well I'm not sure who's luckiest. You that you're still married or her having an 'evil greedy parasitic landlord'!

     
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    Dicing with death there Robert, isn't your lady wife a Glasgow girl,? I wouldn't want to be picking a fight with her

     
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    We had a wall and a window between us when I made the comment and a back door handy!

     
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    I invite a response from Generation Rent, Acorn etc after reading this report

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