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Fears over controversial Government proposals for the Private Rental Sector would be eased for letting agents and landlords by the adoption of a rigorous, professional inventory policy, according to one industry boss.

No Letting Go CEO, Nick Lyons said:

“These proposals are wide ranging and they do benefit tenants but, in the end, we all want decent homes in the PRS and we want a level playing field for both letting agents on the one hand, and tenants on the other.

LIS Show – MPU

This is best achieved through transparency at the outset of a tenancy agreement, regular monitoring throughout its duration and a thorough, detailed inspection when the term comes to an end.”

The then Housing Secretary, Michael Gove, revealed the Government’s plans for the private rented sector in June this year.

He then lost his job but was re-instated by Prime Minister Rishi Sunak when he was appointed leader of the Conservative Party last month when he re-affirmed his commitment to reforming the PRS.

The proposals include:

  • A ban on Section 21 so-called ‘no fault’ evictions and an extension of the Decent Homes Standard.
  • An end to arbitrary rent review clauses, giving tenants stronger powers to challenge poor practice and unjustifiable rent increases and enabling them to be repaid rent for non-decent homes.
  • Making it illegal for agents or landlords to have blanket bans on renting to families with children or those in receipt of benefits.
  • Making it easier for tenants to share their homes with much-loved pets.

Mr Gove said these proposals marked a ‘generational shift’ in tenant rights.

Describing it as a ‘new deal’ for renters, he said:

“For too long, many private renters have been at the mercy of unscrupulous landlords who fail to repair homes and let families live in damp, unsafe and cold properties, with the threat of unfair ‘no fault’ evictions hanging over them.”

But critics have warned that the proposals might force more property owners to sell-up and leave the sector which has already seen an exodus of landlords in recent years.

Lyons said:

“What these proposals would do in reality, is take what is already best practice and make it a legal requirement.

Reputable letting agents already operate at a level which is not threatened by these measures.

But as an industry, letting agents and those servicing the sector must make sure that they are meticulous in all aspects of their operations.

We all want to see tenants living in decent homes.

That is true now for the vast majority of tenants in the Private Rented Sector – eight out of 10 private rented homes already achieve or surpass the Decent Homes Standard.

There are still adequate protections in existence but we have to ensure that protocols and compliance are spot on – this is the last line of defence.

Critical to that is the preparation of a professionally prepared inventory – agreed and signed off by both parties – to underpin every tenancy agreement and reassure agents and landlords that their properties are valued as homes and treated with due care and respect for the duration of the letting term.”

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