Tenant demand highest in West Midlands

The West Midlands had the highest number of new tenants registered per branch for September, according to newly released figures from ARLA Propertymark.

Related topics:  Property
Property Reporter
27th October 2021
To Let 556

The membership body for property agents revealed that, during September, new prospective tenant numbers reached 83 per branch and despite falling from 107 against the previous month, this remains the highest figure on record for the month of September though, beating September 2020’s previous record of 82 per branch.

Regionally, the West Midlands had the highest number of new tenants registered per branch with an average of 106. This number was lowest in Northern Ireland where there was only an average of 42 new prospective tenants registered in September.

Rent prices

The number of tenants experiencing rent increases fell slightly in September, as 75 per cent of agents saw landlords increasing rents compared to 79 per cent in August. This is the highest rate on record for the month of September, beating the previous September record of 58 per cent in 2019.

The number of properties managed per letting agent branch increased from 196 in August to 199 in September. This does however remain slightly lower than the previous month’s figure of 204 in July this year. Year on year this is slightly higher than during September last year when the figure stood at 193.

Regionally, Yorkshire & Humberside had the highest number of properties managed per letting agent branch with a figure of 298. However, rental stock was the lowest in London with an average of just 77 properties managed per branch.

The number of tenants successfully negotiating rent reductions increased from 0.4 per cent in August to 0.5 per cent in September.

Propertymark’s CEO Nathan Emerson, comments: “The PRS remains under pressure as we continue to see high demand for properties and rent increases. As we emerge from the pandemic, lower-income renters are facing mounting pressures on their ability to pay their rent, with rising energy prices, inflation set to top 4% by the end of the year, the freeze on Local Housing Allowance rates and the removal of the uplift in Universal Credit only set to exacerbate that.

"While landlords in the private rented sector have been happy to shoulder some of the burden, it is not fair on them or vulnerable tenants who then fall into arrears. It is encouraging to see the government recognise the issue, with the introduction of a £65m debt fund for renters in arrears, which will go some way in helping to sustain tenancies and preventing potential homelessness.”

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