NRLA issues warning over rent shortfall ahead of housing benefit freeze

The warning comes amid a highly competitive rental market with data from Zoopla showing that there are now an average of 12 renters chasing every available home to rent.

Related topics:  Finance,  Rental Market,  NRLA
Property | Reporter
18th March 2025
Stress 771
"It beggars belief that ministers are making it harder for those reliant on housing benefits to sustain their tenancies, especially in an already fiercely competitive rental market"
- Ben Beadle - NRLA

Almost half of all private renters in receipt of housing benefits experience a shortfall between the support they receive from the government and their monthly rents.

That’s according to a new analysis by the National Residential Landlords Association ahead of a planned freeze of housing benefit rates in April.

The most recent official data reveals how 48 per cent of private tenants in receipt of Local Housing Allowance have a shortfall between their allowance and their rents.

In a letter to Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall MP, the NRLA points to figures from the Institute for Fiscal Studies indicating that the last time LHA rates were frozen in 2023, only 5% of rental properties were affordable to those claimants in receipt of LHA.

According to the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, freezing LHA rates for the duration of this Parliament will pull 50,000 renters into poverty, 60,000 will be pushed into deep poverty and 80,000 will be pushed into very deep poverty.

The NRLA warns that freezing LHA rates will serve only to undermine the ability of claimants to prove their ability to sustain a tenancy, particularly amid intense competition for a limited supply of rental homes. It is calling for rates to be re-pegged to at least the lowest 30 per cent of rents for the duration of this Parliament.

Ben Beadle, Chief Executive of the NRLA, said: “It beggars belief that ministers are making it harder for those reliant on housing benefits to sustain their tenancies, especially in an already fiercely competitive rental market.

“Tenants shouldn’t be expected to endure the uncertainty of not knowing what support they can access from one year to the next. It is time to end the insecurity they face and unfreeze housing benefit rates.”

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