Thousands of fewer tenants facing rental arrears in the UK
The number of tenants in the UK severely behind on rental payments has fallen by 35,000 or 35% in last 12 months, new research shows.
The improvement means that 98.5% of private sector tenants now avoid significant rental arrears, according to the latest Tenant Arrears Tracker report from LSL Property Services.
Overall some 67,000 households remain more than two months behind on rent but this is compared to 102,000 in the second quarter of 2013.
Most recently the number of tenants in severe arrears has dropped by 0.2%, between the first three months of 2014 and the second quarter of the year.
As a proportion of all tenants, those in serious arrears of more than two months has also improved, standing at 1.5% in the second quarter compared to 2.2% in the second quarter of 2013.
Improvements in serious rental arrears tally with the latest figures on overall rent arrears, of any duration. According to LSL’s latest Buy to Let Index, overall tenant arrears now stand at just 7%, as of May 2014, down from 8.2% in May 2013.
‘Private renting has absorbed enormous pressure and will continue to do so. For over half a decade, our national aspiration to own our own homes has struggled in the face of the longest economic crisis on record. And in the midst of this, private renting has provided a solution,’ said Paul Jardine, director and receiver at Templeton LPA.
‘Certainly, some households succumbed to the wave of unemployment that followed the 2008 crisis, and as the broader monthly squeeze tightened its grip. For a time, though still for only a small minority of tenants, there was a significant rise in serious rental arrears. But now as the jobs market gradually comes back to life, the effect on the most hard pressed of households is clear to be seen,’ he explained.
‘While wages are yet to pick up significantly, those in the most serious financial problems often face a lack of any earnings at all. So as the risk of unemployment retreats this year, those with serious problems paying their rent, and most at risk from losing their homes, are benefiting the most,’ he added.
However, the report also shows that despite fewer tenants falling into the most severe arrears, the number actually facing eviction, while significantly lower in absolute terms, has continued to rise. As of the first quarter of 2014, some 33,000 tenants are facing potential eviction via court order, up 5.9% from the fourth quarter of 2013. On an annual basis this leaves evictions levels 10% higher than in the first three months of 2013.
Meanwhile, landlords have continued to benefit from both the improving financial position of tenants, and a beneficial mortgage market. Landlords’ own mortgage arrears have fallen for the sixth successive quarter, with just 14,700 buy to let mortgages in arrears in more than three months in the first quarter of 2014, down 10.9% from the previous quarter. On annual basis this means…