Nelson Mail

Tenants farewell ‘unfair’ rental fee

- Susan Edmunds

Renters’ representa­tives say a letting fee ban will stop an ‘‘an inherently unfair’’ charge being levied on tenants at a time when they could least afford it.

The bill banning letting fees on rental properties has passed its third reading and will become law.

Housing and Urban Developmen­t Minister Phil Twyford estimated the change could prevent the handover of up to $47 million in a payments he said were ‘‘unfair’’ and had ‘‘no economic rationale’’.

It is common for tenants to be charged a week’s rent plus GST as a letting fee, plus four weeks’ rent as bond. Only property managers or landlords’ solicitors are allowed to charge the fees at present.

Tenancy rights advocate Robert Whitaker, of Renters United, was pleased with the ban.

‘‘Letting fees were inherently unfair, charging renters for a service rendered to landlords. They represente­d an additional cost at a time when renters could least afford it and the fact that they were almost always charged at the maximum allowable amount shows they had no connection to the actual costs of the service offered.’’

But property managers said tenants would be in for rent rises.

‘‘We have already instituted rental reviews and it is highly likely they will be in excess of what the letting fee annualised would have been,’’ said Kevin Edmunds, of Quinovic, in Thorndon, Wellington.

‘‘This unfortunat­ely impacts on longerterm renters but not much we can do about this. Twyford is adamant that it won’t lead to rent increases. Well he is just plain wrong. I am really not sure what planet he lives on.’’

Bindi Norwell, chief executive of the Real Estate Institute of New Zealand (REINZ), agreed.

‘‘Whilst banning landlords from charging tenants letting fees might help them in the short term, in the long run it’s likely that these costs may be passed on to tenants via an increase in weekly rent,’’ she said.

‘‘Additional­ly, our concern is that it may make tenants with shorter-term tenancy requiremen­ts, such as students or seasonal workers, less attractive to landlords, making it harder for them to obtain rental accommodat­ion.’’

She said it would be better to regulate the property management industry than focus on individual issues.

Whitaker did not accept the argument that rents would rise.

‘‘Rents aren’t determined by costs; they are determined by what people are willing or able to pay, however much hardship that places them in,’’ he said.

‘‘Where there is a supply problem like in Wellington we expect to see increases again next summer, but it’s unlikely those increases will be any greater due to the law change. This ban only affects rentals let by property managers, which is a sizeable proportion in major centres but is still not the whole market.

‘‘Even if rents do rise due to this, at least the cost will be spread across the tenancy, rather than as an upfront cost.

‘‘Additional­ly, we think that getting rid of letting fees will bring a little more security to the market as managers will no longer have a financial incentive to churn tenancies annually.’’

 ?? ROSA WOODS/ STUFF ?? Robert Whitaker of Renters United says letting fees charge tenants for a service rendered to landlords.
ROSA WOODS/ STUFF Robert Whitaker of Renters United says letting fees charge tenants for a service rendered to landlords.

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