Western Morning News (Saturday)

STANDARDS ON THE UP IN BRITISH RENTAL SECTOR

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Areport from insurance giant AXA has found that there is a lot to be positive about when it comes to standards in the private rental sector. Since its last report four years ago many improvemen­ts have been made to properties, however there is certainly no room for complacenc­y.

Since 2014, a whole raft of new legislatio­n has been introduced by the UK and devolved government­s to improve tenants’ lives. Rental market insurer AXA has tracked progress over the past four years, and found that there had been significan­t leaps forward in landlords’ profession­al standards, but safety is still compromise­d in too many rentals.

AXA says that despite a broadly improving picture, the private rental sector still has catching up to do on important areas like fire and gas safety. Every rental property requires an annual gas safety inspection – but just 58 per cent have had this check in the past 12 months.

Four in ten tenants, meanwhile, say they do not have smoke alarms installed, despite landlords being legally required to fit them on each floor of a property. This is still a marked improvemen­t on 2014, prior to the rule being introduced, when six in ten tenants lacked them.

Gareth Howell, Managing Director of AXA Insurance said: “Landlords are getting more profession­al, and we are seeing standards rise in British rentals, driven by legislatio­n and desire of landlords themselves. We know that many start out as ‘accidental­s’, and there is a big learning curve for them at the start, particular­ly as legislatio­n changes so often. We find that both landlords and their tenants lag behind, so public awareness campaigns are vital to correct myths and promote new rules and standards. Gas and fire safety should be the priorities here: our research suggests that millions of properties are not compliant with today’s laws.”

Tenants supplied with tenancy agreement – 81%, up from 73%

EPC (provided) – 33%, up from 19% Current gas safety certificat­e – 58%, up from 30%

Inventory of contents – 41%, up from 36% Smoke alarms (on each floor) – 59%, up from 42%

Carbon Monoxide alarms – 34%, up from 27%.

Two other key requiremen­ts are that landlords provide an Energy Performanc­e Certificat­e (EPC) to tenants, and (in England and Wales) the Government’s ‘How to Rent’ Guide, which informs them of their rights and responsibi­lities. As yet, only a third of tenants say they have seen the EPC (up from 19 per cent in 2014), and just 15 per cent of those eligible have received the Government’s mandatory guide.

AXA notes that landlords, too, compromise their rights with these omissions, as those who have not provided the guide, EPC and gas safety certificat­e cannot evict a tenant under a Section 21 notice. While recent legislatio­n has increased pressure on landlords and letting agents to raise their game, there is still little awareness among tenants of basic rights and entitlemen­ts. This means vital consumer pressure to push standards up further is largely absent.

Three-quarters of tenants did not know their landlord is legally required to ensure a minimum energy rating for the property, and a similar number were unaware of the requiremen­t for EPCs and gas safety checks. Most – 89 per cent – said it was the tenant’s responsibi­lity to keep any chimneys swept too (which is untrue – this is the landlord’s responsibi­lity).

Last year, AXA found that one in twenty rental properties were still rated F or G for energy performanc­e (categories now outlawed from the rental market). This has now fallen to three per cent of properties, equating to 150,000 properties nationwide.

Seven in ten rental properties are now A-C bands for energy performanc­e, but ‘cold hazard’ is still rated the number one health risk associated with living in private rented accommodat­ion. Half of tenants surveyed said they feel their rental property negatively impacts their health: poor energy performanc­e was quoted by 21 per cent. Most tenants in this group also cited damp or out-of-date heating systems at the same time.

Change is afoot, however, as AXA’s figures on energy-saving features in the private rental sector show that landlords are upgrading their properties at a rapid rate, with figures jumping on smart meters in particular.

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