10,000 people across the UK responded to the Tenant Survey, conducted for Knight Frank by YouGov from the analysis Knight Frank has forecasted that homeownership is becoming increasingly harder to achieve due to increasing costs the and as a result the Private Rented Sector will see investment increase to ÂŁ75bn in the next 5-6 years.
Some of the key findings include:
⢠Young professionals (aged 25-34) no longer make up the largest group living in the PRS, having been overtaken by 35 to 49 year olds. This age group is also expected to show the biggest growth in households in the PRS over the coming years, with difficulty in obtaining a mortgage deposit to buy a home remaining a hurdle
⢠Affordability remains the key priority for 61% of tenants when choosing a property. More than one in ten tenants said renting allowed them to live in an area they could not otherwise afford
⢠Location is the second biggest priority for tenants(23%) followed by the size of the property (10%)
⢠Lack of a mortgage deposit remains key driver for renting,
though this ranges from 71% of young families to just 41% of iGens (those aged
under 25)
⢠On average, 69% of tenants still expect to be renting in three yearsâ time,
rising to 93% for Baby Boomers (aged 65+)
⢠Tenant priorities are more focused on âinternalâ factors â amenity within an
apartment â than âexternalâ factors â such as local shops.
Investor survey
Knight Frank spoke with more than 25 of the largest funders and developers of purpose-built PRS and Retirement Housing to gain insight into how the market is set to develop:
⢠38% of respondents said they wanted to engage in providing
âcradle to graveâ housing, i.e. student housing right through to Housing with
Extra Care for older people.
⢠In five yearsâ time, 56% of investment will be outside London (up from
current levels of 44%)
⢠The average net yield for professionally-managed PRS properties is expected
to settle at around 3.9% in 2022
Nick Pleydell-Bouverie, Head of Residential Investment Agency commented, âWe are seeing a significant number of individual private buy-to-let landlord exiting the market as the Governmentâs buy-to-let tax changes start to bite. Large-scale professional PRS landlords are well placed to absorb this, as well as satisfying some of the structural shortfall in our housing supply.
A principal constraint on the delivery of housing is the estimated rate of sales for developers. The Institutional PRS market can significantly accelerate this through near immediate absorption. It is crucial that the UK Government resists further legislation and taxation and enables the PRS market to significantly contribute towards the UK housing challenge.â
Tim Hyatt, Head of Residential Lettings at Knight Frank commented, âOnce again, affordability has emerged as a key reason for people choosing to rent in order to live in an area where they would not be able to buy. However, average rents in Great Britain rose 1% in the 12 months to December as more landlords leave the sector and levels of stock decline. The tenant fee ban, which comes in into effect in June this year, may also result in some landlords increasing rents to offset any extra costs.â