I was recently reading a report by the Home
website which suggested that hordes of landlords are selling their buy-to-let
investments due to increasing burdens on them in the buy-to-let market. Their
findings suggest the number of new properties that came onto the market
nationally (for sale) jumped by 11% across the UK as a result.
Those increasing burdens include new tax rules
coming in over the next 3 to 4 years and the announcement that all
self-managing landlords
(i.e. landlords that don’t use a letting
agent to look after their buy-to-let property) will soon need to register
with a compulsory redress scheme to resolve tenant arguments and disputes; as Westminster
wants to heighten standards in the Private Rented Sector.
Interestingly
I was chatting with a self-managed landlord from Hurstpierpoint, when I was out
socially over the festive period, who didn’t realise the other recent
legislations that have hit the Private Rented sector, including the ‘Right to
Rent’ regulations which came in to operation last year. Landlords have to
certify their tenants have the legal right to live in the UK. This includes
checking and taking copies of their tenant’s passport or visa before the tenancy
is signed. Of course, if you use a letting agent to manage your property, they
will usually sort this for you (as they will with the redress scheme when that
is implemented).
If
you are a self-managed landlord though, the consequences are severe because if
you let a property to a tenant who is living in the UK illegally, you will be
fined up to £3,000. That same Hurstpierpoint landlord popped into my offices in
the New Year, and I checked all his paperwork and ensured he was on the right
side of the law going forward – and I offer the same to any landlord in the Mid
Sussex area if you want me to cast my eye over your buy to let matters.
Overall, Burgess
Hill doesn’t match the national trend, with the number of properties on the
market only rising by 3% in the last year.
It was particularly interesting to see the number of flats increase by
10%, yet the number of semis on the market drop by 2%.
However, speaking
with my team and other property professionals in the area, the majority of that
movement in the number of properties and the types of properties on the market
isn’t down to landlords dumping their properties on the market. The whole property
market has changed in the last 12 months, with the majority of the change in
the number and type of properties for sale due to the owner-occupier market,
not landlords (a subject I will write
about soon in my Mid Sussex Property Market blog later this spring). You
see, for the last ten years, each month there has always been a small number of
Mid Sussex landlords who have been releasing their monies from their buy to let
properties - as is the nature of all investments!
Nationally, the
number of rental properties coming on to the market to rent fell by 16% in Q4
2017 compared to Q4 2016, but that isn’t because there are 16% less rental
properties to rent – it’s because tenants are staying in their rental
properties longer meaning less are coming on the market to be RE-LET.
Nevertheless, some Mid Sussex landlords will want to release the equity
held in their buy to let properties in 2018. All I suggest is that you speak
with your letting agent first, as putting a rental property on the open market
often spooks the tenants to hand in their notice days after you put it on the
market (because they don’t like the uncertainty and also believe they will
become homeless!). This means you have an empty property, costing you money with
no rent coming in. However, some letting
agents who specialise in portfolio management have select lists of landlords
that will buy with sitting tenants in. If you have a portfolio in Mid Sussex and
are considering selling some or all of them – drop me a line as I might have a portfolio
landlord for you (with the peace of mind that you won’t have any rental voids).
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