Taylor Scott International News
The private rented sector is continuing its rapid growth across the UK and is now well established as the second biggest form of tenure after home ownership, new research shows. It has overtaken the social rented sector and large scale investment into the private rented sector (PRS) by funds and other institutions is set to treble over the next five years boosting growth further, according to the new tenant survey from real estate firm Knight Frank. The Tenant Survey carried out by YouGov on behalf of Knight Frank estimating that total investment will rise to £50 billion over the next five years and large scale investors are operating an average gross to net yield of 26% for new Build to Rent developments. It also shows that some 53% of tenants favour a six month or one year tenancy for rented accommodation and 52% said living close to work or their place of study is a key priority while 30% said the main reason for moving between rented properties was to ‘upgrade’ to a nicer or larger property. The survey found that 38% of tenants have lived in five or more rental properties and while the majority of respondents had moved within a mile of their previous property, some 19% had moved more than 60 miles, indicating a relocation for work or study, highlighting the flexibility of PRS as a tenure. Some 24% of Londoners are prepared to pay 50% as a maximum amount of their gross annual income on rent, up from 22% last year and a quarter of those living in the PRS do not want to, or don’t know if they want to buy a home in the future. Of those that express a desire to eventually buy a home using a mortgage, less than half are currently saving towards a deposit. Also, a quarter of those living in the private rented sector live alone, while 34% live in a couple without children. Some 43% of 18 to 24 years olds share with other adults in a flat share. Grainne Gilmore, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, pointed out that the private rented sector is continuing to grow in size, with around 5.4 million, or 20% of households now being let out to private tenants. ‘There has been a generational shift in the private rented sector. More households are now living in rented accommodation for longer, and while housing affordability is certainly a factor here, rented accommodation is also becoming an established flexible form of tenure, an attribute welcomed especially among younger workers,’ she explained. Indeed, this was confirmed in last year’s Tenant Survey, with 38% of under 35s saying they didn’t want a mortgage or that renting suited their lifestyle, rising to 49% for those aged under 25. The number of under 45s living in the sector has more than doubled, to nearly 3.1 million over the last decade, and those aged 25 to 34… Taylor Scott International
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