It’s now been a good 12/18 months
since annual rental price inflation in Haywards Heath peaked at 4.3%. Since
then we have seen increasingly more humble rent increases. In fact if you look at Haywards Heath for example, certain
parts of the Haywards Heath rental market over the autumn, the rental market
saw some slight falls in rents. So, could this be the earliest indication that the
trend of high rent increases seen over the last few years, may now be starting
to buck that trend?
Well, possibly in the short term, but
in the coming few years, it is my opinion Haywards Heath rents will regain
their upward trend and continue to increase as demand for Haywards Heath rental
property will outstrip supply, and this is why.
The only counterbalance to that improved
rental growth would be to meaningfully increase rental stock (i.e. the number
of rental properties in Haywards Heath). However, because of the Government’s
new taxes on landlords being introduced between 2017 and 2021, that means buy-to-let
has (and will) be less attractive in the short term for certain types of
landlords (meaning less new properties will be bought to let out).
Interestingly, countless market experts
assumed at the start of 2017, that the number of rental properties would in
fact drop throughout the year. The assumption being as the new tax rules for
landlords started to kick in, landlords looked to kick their tenants out, sell
up and invest their capital elsewhere. (Although ironically that would lower
supply of rental properties, decreasing the supply, meaning rents would
increase again!).
Anecdotal evidence suggests, confirmed
by my discussions with fellow property, accountancy and banking professionals
in Mid Sussex, that Mid Sussex landlords are (instead of selling up en masse), actually either (1) re-mortgaging
their Haywards Heath buy-to-let properties instead or (2) converting their
rental portfolios into limited companies to side step the new taxation rules.
The sentiment of many Mid Sussex
landlords is that property has always weathered the many stock market crashes
and runs in the last 50 years. There is something inheritably understandable
about bricks and mortar – compared to the voodoo magic of the stock market and
other exotic investment vehicles like debentures and crypto-currency (e.g.
BitCoin).
Remarkably, there is some good news
for tenants, as Tory’s recently published
the draft Tenants’ Fee Bill, which is designed to prohibit the charging of
tenants lettings fees on set up of the tenancy. However, looking at
evidence in Scotland, I expect rents to rise to compensate landlords, thus
hammering faithful tenants looking for long-term tenancy agreements the
hardest. This growth will be on top of any usual organic rent growth. It really is swings and roundabouts!
So, what does this all mean for
landlords and tenants in Haywards Heath? In my considered opinion, rents in Haywards
Heath over the next 5 years will rise by 5.5%, taking the average rent for a Haywards
Heath property from £1,258 per month to £1,327 per month.
In the past, making money from buy-to-let property was as easy as falling off a log. But with these new tax rules, new rental regulations and the overall changing dynamics of the Mid Sussex property market, as a Mid Sussex landlord, you are going to need work smarter and have every piece of information, advice and opinion to hand on the Mid Sussex, Regional and National property markets, to enable you to continue to make money.
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