Birmingham Post

City housing crisis set to become the worst in UK

-

BIRMINGHAM’S housing crisis is set to deepen to become the worst in the UK, according to new research. Socio-economic experts at Marrons looked ahead to how many more homes every city would need by 2040 to meet growing population­s. Known as the ‘youngest city in Europe’, Birmingham faces property issues as 40% of its residents are aged under 25 and will need their own homes in the coming two decades. At the same time, the city faces under-occupancy at older people’s properties, where many over-65s remain in homes that are much larger than they need, said the Marrons team.

Birmingham will need to build more than 127,600 new homes in less than two decades. That is the most needed for any English local authority area, the study found.

Birmingham was predicted to not only face delivering the highest number of homes by 2040 but also having the highest number of under-occupied properties. Marrons said the city is also poised to experience the most significan­t decline in affordable housing.

The analysis highlighte­d that by 2040 there were expected to be:

76,526 more people aged 16 and over living in Birmingham – this includes 42,328 people aged 66

Over 20,045 first-time buyers aged between 25 and 44

446,506 people of student age from 18 to 22 living in Birmingham The number of new properties needed by 2040 in Birmingham was far greater than even Greater London’s Tower Hamlets and Barnet boroughs, which will need 102,547 and 93,929 new homes respective­ly.

The research found that more than 46,800 people aged 66 and over were currently living in homes larger than necessary that had two or more bedrooms left unoccupied.

If the trend continues, more than 128,800 households of that age group are expected to be under-occupied in 2040.

At the same time, Birmingham’s student-age population is projected to grow by 6% to nearly 107,000 people in 2040 across its five main universiti­es.

Meanwhile, the city’s social housing stock is estimated to plummet by an additional 19,170 properties despite 20,625 people being on the city’s housing register in 2023.

Charlotte El Hakiem, planning director at Marrons, said: “As the UK’s second-largest city and the economic heart of the West Midlands, Birmingham faces massive housing pressures. It has a large young population that requires affordable housing to help them get onto the property ladder [and] a significan­t ageing population, which has led to high levels of under-occupancy.”

Marrons used data from the latest Office for National Statistics Census, 2018-based population projection­s, local authority housing registers, affordable housing stock records and extrapolat­ed housing requiremen­t figures using the government’s standard method.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom