Rents in England and Wales fall for first time since March

Taylor Scott International News

Residential rents across England and Wales have fallen on a monthly basis for the first time since March, despite fresh records in three regions, according to the latest index. Average rents fell by 0.1% on a monthly basis, down from £804 in July to stand at an average of £803 in August, the data from the Your Move and Reeds Rains index shows. However, on an annual basis rents are now 5.5% higher than in August 2014, representing a slowdown since July when annual rent rises stood at an all-time record of 6.8%. ‘August has witnessed a break in a series of blistering rent rises. Yet this mild correction comes on the back of a whole year of acceleration. Rents are rising rapidly on an annual basis, underpinned by an improving economic picture for many potential tenants and the peak lettings season is only just about to start this autumn,’ said Adrian Gill, director of estate agents Reeds Rains and Your Move. ‘There is also no major change to the fundamentals of supply and demand. This means that in the longer term, faster rent rises may become a semi-permanent feature of the British property market. Alongside purchase prices, rents will continue to rise rapidly until something happens to address a drastic shortage of homes in the UK,’ he added. A regional breakdown show that despite a slower picture across the board, three individual regions of England and Wales saw rents hit fresh records in August. In the West Midlands average rents of £586 per month represent the highest levels on record, while rents in the East Midlands have set their own record at £596. As the third region to see record rents, the East of England has also overtaken London to see the fastest annual growth of 11.5%, ahead of 10.2% annual increases in the capital. This takes average rents in the East of England to £843 per month. Meanwhile, while relegated to second place in terms of annual rent rises, London’s tenants still pay by far the most in absolute terms, with average rents of £1,278 in August. Annual rent rises in the West and East Midlands were also particularly strong, standing at 4.6% and 5.9% respectively. At the other end of the spectrum, Welsh rents are 3.1% lower than a year ago and the only region to see an annual fall. This comes as Wales has also seen the most negative trend on a monthly basis, with rents in the principality dropping 4% since July. In total five out of 10 regions have seen rents fall on a monthly basis. After Wales this is led by the South East, with rents 1.4% lower than in July, and the North East with a 1.1% monthly decrease. In London rents have seen a rapid reversal with a 0.3% fall following a 3.3% increase over the previous month. Leading the field on a monthly basis, South Western rents rose 3.2% between July and August,… Taylor Scott International

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