Back in
the spring, there was a surge in Haywards Heath landlords buying buy to let
property in Haywards Heath as they tried to beat George Osborne’s new stamp
duty changes which kicked in on the 1st
April 2016. To give you an idea of the sort of numbers we are talking about, below
are the property statistics for sales either side of the deadline in RH16.
Jan 2016
– 63 properties sold
Feb 2016 –
72 properties sold
March
2016 – 118 properties sold
April
2016 – 37 properties sold
May 2016
– 49 properties sold
Normally,
the number of sales in the spring months is very similar, irrespective of the
month. However, as one can see, this year was a completely different picture as
landlords moved their purchases forward to beat the stamp duty increase. You
would think that even with a basic knowledge of supply and demand economics,
rents would be affected in a downwards direction?
However,
there appears to be no apparent effect on the levels of rent being asked in Haywards
Heath - and more importantly achieved - and this direction of rents
is not likely to inverse any time soon, particularly as legislation planned for
2017 might reduce rental stock and push property values ever upward. The decline
of buy to let mortgage interest tax relief will make some properties loss making,
forcing landlords to pass on costs to tenants in the form of higher rents just
to stay afloat. Even those who can still operate may be deterred from making
further investments, reducing rental stock at a time of severe property
shortage.
But it’s
not all bad news for tenants. Whilst average rents in Haywards Heath since 2005
have increased by 22.6%, inflation has been 38.5% over the same time frame,
meaning Haywards Heath tenants are 15.9% better off in real terms when it comes
to their rent (which is a sizeable chunk of most people’s monthly household
budgets)
Year
|
Average Rent in Haywards Heath per
month
|
2005
|
1020
|
2006
|
1043
|
2007
|
1067
|
2008
|
1102
|
2009
|
1119
|
2010
|
1103
|
2011
|
1130
|
2012
|
1156
|
2013
|
1173
|
2014
|
1190
|
2015
|
1217
|
2016
|
1251
|
I found
it particularly interesting looking at the rent rises over the last five years
in Haywards Heath, as it was five years ago we started to see the very early
green shoots of growth of the Haywards Heath economy. As a whole, following the Credit crunch (2011),
rents in Haywards Heath have risen by an average of 2.4% a year – fascinating
don’t you think?
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