The Daily Telegraph - Saturday - Money

Baby boomers with spare bedrooms fuel housing pain

Young stuck in costly rental sector as retirees hold on to family-sized homes. By Ollie Corfe

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More than four fifths of baby boomer households have spare bedrooms that are being left unused as the young bear the brunt of the housing crisis.

Pensioners are clinging to their family- sized homes long after the children have moved out, with 84.1pc of households where an over65-year- old was the main resident considered under- occupied in the most recent census. Among households where the head of the household was aged between 25 and 34, the under-occupied rate falls to 53.3pc.

There are now just under 9.8m households across England with at least two spare bedrooms, separate figures from the latest English Housing Survey (EHS) show. This is up 1.7m in a decade, and means at least 19.6m rooms are going unused and are locked out of the housing market.

Declining affordabil­ity has made home ownership the privilege of older generation­s. Last year, 35.6pc of all owner occupiers were over the age of 65 – up from 24pc 20 years ago.

The young, meanwhile, face an increasing­ly merciless rental market. Almost two thirds of private renters are under the age of 45. Average monthly rents in England have soared by £300 over the past 10 years, crossing £1,000 for the first time in 202223, according to the EHS.

The neighbourh­ood of Whitby and

Stanney Woods, to the south of Ellesmere Port in Cheshire, has the highest rate of households with an unused bedroom, at 97.8pc.

Ten miles to the north, on the Wirral, the Poulton, Raby Mere and Thornton Hough area had the second-highest proportion at 97.7pc. Ingleby Barwick West and South, to the south of Stockton-onTees, came a close third at 97.7pc.

Six of the top 10 areas were in the North East and North West.

The lowest rate of excess bedrooms among households where the main resident was of retirement age was Leicester city centre, at 27pc. Of the 25 neighbourh­oods with the lowest share of under-occupied households, 16 were in London.

Part of the problem is that downsizing often does not make financial sense for older homeowners.

Lucian Cook, of Savills, said: “In order to make most efficient use of our existing housing stock, there needs to be a change in attitudes to downsizing, not just among individual­s but also among policymake­rs.

“While housing policy initiative­s tend to focus on getting younger generation­s onto the housing ladder, we also need to look at financial incentives for downsizers to free up stock, as well as greater provision of retirement housing that better suit the needs of active downsizers and that the older generation­s aspire to live in.”

Some have called for stamp duty relief for those selling their family home and downsizing into a smaller property.

The number of people living in homes that are larger than their needs will grow further over the next 10 years as population demographi­cs ‘The last thing anyone wants to do is kick people out of their family homes’ shift, said Neal Hudson, of BuiltPlace analysts.

Between 2011 and 2021, the share of the population aged 65 or older in Britain expanded from 16.4pc to 18.6pc, and now stands at 11m people, according to census data. By 2031, that figure is expected to reach 13m.

Mr Hudson added: “There are enough bedrooms in England for everyone to have one and to have several million extra, but they are very unequally distribute­d.

“It is very hard to make the distributi­on better. The last thing anyone wants to do is kick people out of their family homes.”

Another part of the problem is that house building targets are far from being met.

Ahead of the last general election the Tories pledged to build 300,000 homes a year by the mid-2020s in England. But just 234,000 dwellings were added to the country’s housing stock in the 202223 financial year.

Earlier this month, Rishi Sunak admitted there was “much more to do” to help younger generation­s get on the property ladder as the Prime Minister unveiled a bevy of new plans to “put rocket boosters” under constructi­on in built-up areas.

The rule changes include telling urban councils falling behind on housing targets that they can only refuse planning permission on brownfield sites under exceptiona­l circumstan­ces, and allow commercial buildings to be converted into homes without the need for full planning permission.

Alistair Smyth, of the National Housing Federation, said: “We are facing a severe housing shortage in England which has been caused by decades of under- investment and inadequate piecemeal policy decisions on housing and planning.

“To solve the housing crisis this short-term approach must end. As we head toward the election, we need the next government to commit to a national, strategic long-term housing plan that is properly funded and based on measurable outcomes for people in housing need.”

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