Rentals rise by 20%
Updated on 09 September 2008
The number of people renting a home has soared by nearly 20 per cent during the past three months.
Around 64 per cent of letting agents outside of London said demand for rental property outstripped the number of homes they had on their books, falling to 41 per cent within the capital, according to the Association of Residential Letting Agents (Arla).
Unsurprisingly, given the boom in demand, rents are also rising, with average rents for a house increasing by 3 per cent to £387 a week during the three months to the end of August, while rents on flats have jumped by 7 per cent to around £253.
At the same time, the average amount of time a property is empty has fallen to just four weeks or less each year, while tenants are now staying in properties for around 16.7 months, rising to more than 18 months in London.
Ian Potter, Arla's head of operations, said: "This steady rise in rental growth that we see yet again, coupled to clear evidence that there is no unusual selling, proves once again that the credit crunch effect on the private rented sector exists only in the imagination.
"This is underlined by the short void periods and length of time that tenants stay in rental properties."
But the group added that despite the positive outlook for the sector, investment landlords were delaying expanding their portfolios until the outlook for the housing market was clearer.
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