Skip to content

Rental prices up year on year in 11 out of 12 UK regions, latest index shows

Overall the average rent in the UK, excluding Greater London, is now £740 per month while in the capital city it is £1,510 per month, according to the latest rental index from HomeLet.

Only the North West of England has seen rental prices drop with a fall of 3.4% from £646 per month to £624 per month.

However, rent prices for new tenancies in Greater London are rising at the slowest rate for almost two years. The January index data shows Greater London rent prices are 6.2% higher for the three months to January 2016 compared to the same period in 2015, the slowest rate of growth seen in Greater London, the slowest since March 2014.

By comparison, rent prices in other regions continue to rise steadily with the South East of England and the East Midlands seeing the highest rent price rises in the three months to January 2016, at 7.2% and 6.8% respectively.
 
Monthly data gives a different picture. Rent prices in the UK, excluding Greater London, were 0.2% higher in the three months to January 2016 than in the three months to December 2015. In Greater London, rent prices have fallen by 0.9% in the three months to January 2016, compared to the previous month.

Overall, six out of 12 UK regions have seen rent prices rise in the three months to January 2016 compared to last month, while six have seen prices fall.
 
‘It’s notable that there has been a further fall in the rate at which average rents in the Greater London area are rising. In recent years, the capital has seen much faster rates of increase than the rest of the country, but it may be that an affordability ceiling has now been reached in London and that rents will now track other parts of the UK more closely,’ said Martin Totty, chief executive officer of the firm’s parent company Barbon Insurance Group.

‘The fact that UK wide average rents in the private rented sector continue to show sustained upwards growth reflects there is still strong demand for rental properties, driven mainly by the impact of the long term structural imbalance in supply and demand of property,’ he pointed out.

‘Landlords achieving higher average rents over time also suggests that tenants starting a new tenancy are proving they can afford higher average rents. With demand outstripping supply, some would-be tenants may be able to outbid rivals for properties, which could drive higher rents,’ he added.
 

Related