As the winter months draw in
and the temperature starts to drop, keeping one’s home warm is vital. Yet, with
the price of gas and electricity rising quicker than a Saturn V rocket and gas,
oil and electricity taking on average 4.4% of a typical Brit’s pay packet (and
for those Brit’s with the lowest 10% of incomes, that rockets to an eye
watering 9.7%), whether you are a tenant or homeowner, keeping your energy
costs as low as possible is vital for the household budget and the environment
as a whole.
For
the last 10 years, every private rental property must have an Energy-Performance-Certificate
(EPC) rating. The property is given an energy
rating, very similar to those on washing machines and fridges with the rainbow
coloured graph, of between A to G (A being the most efficient and G the worst).
New legislation comes in to force next spring (2018) for English and Welsh private
landlords making it illegal to let a property that does not meet a certain
energy rating. After the 1st of April next year, any new tenant
moving into a private rented property or an existing tenant renewing their
tenancy must have property with an energy performance rating of E or above on the
property’s EPC and the new law will apply for all prevailing tenancies in the spring
of 2020. After April 2018, if a landlord lets a property in the ‘F’ and ‘G’
ratings (i.e. those properties with the
worst energy ratings) Trading Standards could fine the landlord up to
£4,000.
Personally,
I have grave apprehensions that many Mid Sussex landlords may be totally
unaware that their rental properties could fall below these new legal minimum
requirements for energy efficiency benchmarks. Whilst some households may
require substantial works to get their property from an F/G rating to an E
rating or above, my experience is most properties may only need some minor work
to lift them from illegal to legal. By planning and acting now, it will
mitigate the need to find tradespeople in the spring when every other Mid
Sussex landlord will be panicking and paying top dollar for work to comply.
Whilst
there is money and effort involved in upgrading the energy efficiency of rental
property, a property that is energy efficient will have greater appeal to tenants
and other buy-to-let landlords/investors and this will enable you to obtain higher
rents and sale price (when you come to
sell your investment).
So,
how many properties are there in the area that are F and G rated? Quite a few
in fact. Looking at the whole of the Mid Sussex District Council area, of the 7,322
privately rented properties, there are;
357
rental properties in the F banding
102
rental properties in the G banding
That
means just fewer than one in 16 rental properties in the Haywards Heath and
surrounding area has an Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) rating of F or G.
From April next year it will be illegal to rent out those homes rated F and G
homes with a new tenancy.
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