The Scotsman

Rent dispute resolution figures fall

- By KIRSTY MCLUCKIE

The numb er of commercial rent disputes reaching a third party in Scotland has fallen to its lowest level for more than five years, according to analysis from property consultanc­y Knight Frank.

Figures obtained by the consultant­s from the Royal Institutio­n of Chartered Surveyors( R IC S) show that the number of cases being referred to third-party dispute resolution dropped from 169 in 2017 to 123 in 2018 – down a little more than one-quarter at 27.2 per cent.

This is less than half of the 292 cases that went to independen­t assessment in 2016. It is also below the figures for 2015, 2014 and 2013.

Independen­t experts or arbitrator­s are appointed to cases where commercial tenants and landlords cannot see eye to eye on a new rental agreement at a fixed-term rent review date.

Andrew Hill, a partner at Knight Frank, says: “In the aftermath of [the economic crash in] 2008, most businesses became used to their rents reducing or staying the same.

“However, in 2016 we saw a spike in the number of third-party applicatio­ns, as the market showed continued improvemen­t and landlords, in turn, became more bullish in their aspiration­s on rental growth.

“This was disputed by tenants who had become accustomed to rent stagnation.”

Hill observes that in the decade since then, the occupier market in Scotland’s Central Belt has become even tight er for both offices and industrial premises.

He says: “Despite a challengin­g macro-economic environmen­t, sentiment has continued to improve and there are real constraint­s on availabili­ty.

“As a result, generally, businesses appear more minded to accept rent increases provided there is compelling comparable evidence, as quality space remains at a premium.”

The RICS numbers come against the backdrop of a tightening sup - ply of available office and industrial commercial property space in the Central Belt.

In Edinburgh, office lettings completed between January and March 2019 saw grade-a availabili­ty fall to just 235,000sq ft.

Knight Frank predicts that– combined with other factors–this will drive prime office rents to £36 per sq ft by the end of 2019.

Despite a below-average first quarter for take-up in Glasgow, new grade-A availabili­ty fell to 33,353sq ft. Headline prime office rates currently sit at £32.50 per sq ft in the city centre for new accommodat­ion, and £30 per sq ft at refurbishe­d premises.

Hill adds: “It’s not the case across the board. Retailers located beyond the main thoroughfa­res, in particular, are mostly seeing rents stagnate or even go into reverse. Prime offices and industrial, however, are still subject to a real lack of available space which – all things being equal – should put upwards pressure on rents for the foreseeabl­e future.”

Across the UK, RICS stated that it had seen an average 6 per cent rise in commercial rent review applicatio­ns from 2013-17, while there was a 12 per cent decline witnessed over the last 12 months.

 ??  ?? Disagreeme­nts over rental terms may be down, but supply has also dropped; there is just 235,000sq ft of grade-a commercial space available in Edinburgh
Disagreeme­nts over rental terms may be down, but supply has also dropped; there is just 235,000sq ft of grade-a commercial space available in Edinburgh

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