Agents ask: Why did we even bother with fee ban consultation?

Agents ask: Why did we even bother with fee ban consultation?


Todays other news
The founder is going to step back from the business...
It has a growth strategy for this key market...
The institution's monthly survey measures agents' sentiment...
The analysis looks at rentals below £750 pcm...
The data comes from ARLA Propertymark...


ARLA has led a call by many letting agents on hearing the Queen’s Speech – what was the point of a formal consultation into a fee ban if the decision had already been made?

This follows news that legislation at some point in the next two years will ban agents and landlords from seeking tenants to pay any charge as a condition of their tenancy with the exception of the rent, a refundable security deposit of no more than one month’s rent, and a holding deposit no more than one week’s rent, and tenant default fees. The measure will also allow tenants to recover unlawfully charged fees. 

“It’s unlikely the government had enough time to analyse all of the responses from the consultation, as it only closed 12 working days ago, on June 2” says David Cox,  managing director of the Association of Residential Letting Agents, referring to the consultation process required as part of implementing a ban.

 

“It appears they had already made their decision and therefore the consultation was no more than a ‘tick box’ exercise and they haven’t appropriately taken the industry’s views into account” he adds.

 

“A ban on letting agent fees will cost the sector jobs, make buy-to-let investment even less attractive, and ultimately result in the costs being passed on to tenants” he adds. 

 

Research conducted by Capital Economics for ARLA Propertymark earlier this year shows that referencing checks undertaken by agents take, on average, eight hours to complete. 

 

“It is therefore right and proportionate that the industry is recompensed for this work, which benefits tenants. The research also showed that letting agents stand to lose around £200m in turnover, costing the sector 4,000 jobs. Landlords themselves would lose £300m meaning they may seek to cover their losses by increasing rents to tenants” he insists.

 

ARLA says that on average rent costs will go up £103 per tenant, per year, ultimately meaning tenants who move more frequently will reap savings on their overall costs – but longer term tenants, who are usually lower income families, will see a loss as their rents rise year-on-year. 

 

The government says the full draft of the Tenants’ Fees Bill will be published later this year.

The Residential Landlords’ Association was also unhappy at the measure, confirmed in the Queen’s Speech, saying it left the rental sector in limbo.

 

“Rather than proceeding with draft plans that will be eclipsed by battles over Brexit, ministers could instead use powers they already have to introduce a fixed menu of fees which letting agents would have to publish. This would enable tenants to immediately understand fee structures, and enable them to more easily shop around” according to the association.

Share this article ...

Join the conversation: Login and have your say

Want to comment on this story? Our focus is on providing a platform for you to share your insights and views and we welcome contributions. All comments are screened using specialist software and may be reviewed by our editorial team before publication. Letting Agent Today reserves the right to edit, withhold or delete comments that violate our guidelines, including those that harass, degrade, or intimidate others. Users who post such content may be banned from commenting.
By commenting, you agree to our Commenting Terms of Use.
4 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Recommended for you
Related Articles
It has a growth strategy for this key market...
Revealed! The regions generating the most rent for landlords
The data comes from ARLA Propertymark...
Chestertons is now part of the fast-expanding Campions Group...
Agency backing Purpose Built Student Accommodation over buy to let
It's all down to the Renters Right Act, it's claimed...
The sheet must be given to tenants by May 31...
The controversy involves the tenant union Acorn...
Well known business billionaire enters private rental sector as investor...
Recommended for you
Latest Features
The founder is going to step back from the business...
It has a growth strategy for this key market...
The institution's monthly survey measures agents' sentiment...
Sponsored Content
Alto Intelligence, Street AI and Reapit RAI. Three platforms, three...
On Friday 15 May at 1pm, Alto is hosting a...
When Riccardo Iannucci-Dawson became CEO of Alto, he took the...

Send to a friend

In order to send this article to a friend you must first login. Click on the button below to login or sign up.