Irrespective of whether you are a tenant or a homeowner, to bring up a
family, the most important factors are security and stability in the home. A
great bellwether of that security and stability in a rented property is whether
tenants are constantly moving. Many tenancies last just six months with families at
risk of being thrown out after that with just two months’ notice .
Some
say we need to deal with the terrible insecurity of Britain’s private rental
market by creating longer tenancies of 3 or 5 years instead of the current six
months. However, the numbers seem to be telling a different story. The average length of
residence in private rental homes has risen in the last 5 years from 3.7 years
to 4 years (a growth of 8.1%), which in turn has directly affected the number
of renters who have children. In fact, the proportion of private rented
property that have dependent children in them, has gone from 29.1% in 2003 to
37.4% today.
Looking specifically at Aylesbury compared to the National figures, of
the 5,073 private rental homes in Aylesbury, 1,799 of these have dependent
children in them (or 35.5%), which is interestingly below the National average
of 37.4%.
Even more fascinating are the other tenure types in Aylesbury…
·
39.5% of Social (Council) Housing in Aylesbury have
dependent children
·
43.9% of Aylesbury Owner Occupiers (with a Mortgage)
have dependent children
·
9.8% of Owner Occupiers (without a Mortgage) have
dependent children
Although, when we look at the length of time these other tenure types
have, whilst the average length of a tenancy for the private rented sector is 4
years, it is 11.4 years in social (council) housing, 24.1 years for home owners
without a mortgage and 10.4 years of homeowners with mortgages.
Anecdotally I have always known this, but this just proves landlords do
not spend their time seeking opportunities to evict a tenant as the average
length of tenancy has steadily increased. This noteworthy 8.1% increase in the
average length of time tenants stay in a private rented property over the last
5 years, shows tenants are happy to stay longer and start families.
So, as landlords are already meeting tenants’ wants and needs when it
comes to the length of tenancy, I find it strange some politicians are calling
for fixed term 3 and 5 year tenancies. Such heavy handed regulation could stop
landlords renting their property out in the first place, cutting off the supply
of much needed rental property, meaning tenants would suffer as rents went up.
Finally, there is an extra piece of good news for Aylesbury tenants. The
English Housing Survey notes that those living in a private rented property for
long periods of time generally paid less
rent than those who chopped and changed.
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