More tenants in UK believe they can own their own home, survey finds

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British tenants are feeling more optimistic about their finances and regard buying their own home as a more realistic prospect due to being able to save for a deposit, according to new research.

In 2013 some 67% of tenants surveyed said they rent because they can’t buy, and didn’t expect that to change. This year that figure has fallen to 44% per cent, as four in 10 tenants, equal to 1.7 million, say they expect to get off the rental market within five years.

The research from AXA also shows that the number of tenants saving for a deposit has doubled to 25%, up from just 13% in 2013. It suggests that this optimism is largely limited to tenants in the under 35 category, however, and the average tenant still expects to rent until the end of 2025, a further nine and a half years.

While many rent reluctantly, there is a growing number who choose not to buy. A third of tenants now say their primary reason isn’t lack of options, but the freedom and lifestyle benefits renting brings.

The research also found that 17% of tenants are career builders who follow job opportunities or projects around the country and 18% simply prefer the low commitment of renting, both financially and geographically.

While most tenants expect to be on the rental market for a further decade, they will only stay in each rental property for an average of two years. And there is little appetite for a more European culture of five and 10 year leases as 61% prefer the status quo of six months to a year, with just 18% saying they would benefit from longer tenancies.

One reason identified by the study was that in Britain tenants are a highly mobile population. Within the next five years, two thirds of tenants, or 2.7 million people nationwide, plan to move to another part of the UK, and one in 10 plan emigration. London, Bristol and Edinburgh top the list of locations where tenants tend to stay the shortest time.

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However, in a country that historically equates property ownership with status or success, many feel there is a lingering stigma attached to being a tenant with 32% saying they feel stigmatised for not being a property owner.

Another downside of Britain’s short term rental culture is a sense of insecurity all round for both tenants and their landlords, the survey suggests. Some 64% of tenants say they worry about being forced out of their property at short notice. Older tenants and those with children worry most.

‘I just wonder what will happen if my landlord sells my house and I have to move, which is not easy to do at 72 years old. I’ve built a social life around me in my village and clubs that I go to,’ said one respondent.

Tenants also struggle to feel a sense of home or control over their personal space. A third of tenants surveyed said they have to shop around for new tenancies, not because of price, but because it is the only way they can improve their living space, citing restrictions on hanging pictures, having pets and decorating.

In a separate AXA survey, landlords named high turnover of tenants as the thing that most keeps them awake at night. With such tenuous relationships, only a minority say they know their tenants personally and 68% see their tenants once a year or less.

‘Private landlords are filling the gap left by the decline in social rentals and home ownership, and they are becoming the second biggest source of housing for the British population,’ said Darrell Sansom, managing director at AXA Business Insurance.

‘But rental culture is not as well embedded in British society as in other European countries. Short term tenancies prevail here, and while bringing benefits to some, this means that both landlords and tenants can feel as if the ground is constantly shifting under their feet. How can tenants create a sense of home in this situation? And for landlords, a revolving door of strangers means income insecurity, periods of vacancy with much increased risk of damage and crime and more wear and tear,’ he pointed out.

‘With such a mobile tenant population, landlords need to work that bit harder to encourage longer stays. Few tenants are interested in being locked in to a long lease, but little compromises on things like pets, freebies like broadband or cleaning services or offering to redecorate can build precious loyalty,’ he explained.

‘As an insurer, we also know that when landlords and tenants get to know each other and talk regularly, they have more peace of mind and greater financial security in the long run,’ he added.

 

Article by propertywire

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