Christian

 

Home Information Packs.  Remember those?   Well the same piece of complex legislation that inspired those much-loved documents also heralded a new regime for the licensing of Houses in Multiple Occupation (HMOs).   The Housing Act 2004 sets out a new definition of HMO and requires Landlords letting certain types of HMO to apply for a licence from the local authority. There are very strict penalties on landlords who fail to comply.  In 2010 a landlord in Brighton was fined £2000 plus costs for failing to register an HMO and last year a Cornish Landlord only avoided a whopping fine of £62,500 for failure to register and other offences because of her ill health and impending bankruptcy.

So what exactly is a House in Multiple Occupation?  As might be expected, the definition is not straightforward.  In simplified terms, an HMO is a building, or part of a building, that:

  • is occupied by persons who do not form a single household
  • who use the building as their main residence
  • and who share one or more basic amenities (such as a bathroom or kitchen).

Examples might include a house in which rooms are let individually with shared kitchen and bathroom facilities, or a property let to a group of tenants who are not part of the same family, or a building converted into bedsits with shared bathroom facilities.

Not all HMOs need a licence.  Compulsory licensing under the Act only applies to HMO’s consisting of

  • 3 or more storeys
  • occupied by 5 or more people
  • in 2 or more households.

So a 3 storey town house let to 5 students would require a licence.  As would a two storey property let to 5 people who are not related, where the property is above commercial premises (as the whole building would be 3 storeys). However, the same properties let to 4 people would not require a licence.

The above are the mandatory licensing requirements.  BUT individual local authorities have the power to extend licensing requirements locally to other types of HMO, so landlords should always check the definition that applies in their area.

Councils can set their own licence fees, which can be over £1000 per property in some areas and, in addition to a fine of up to £20,000, landlords who fail to apply for a licence can be required to repay the rent received in the period when the HMO was not registered.

The licences, which usually last for around 5 years, impose strict standards on fire and electrical safety, the number of tenants permitted in the property and even on the kind of person who can be a landlord.

The legislation is intended to maintain standards of rented accommodation and, in particular, to stop parts of some cities turning into ghettos with tenants crammed into unsuitable and poorly-maintained properties.

If in doubt, we advise you to check with your local authority.  The requirements are onerous and in many cases Landlords may opt to reduce the number of tenants in a property to 4 or less – even if this means a reduction in rent –  to avoid having to comply.

 

 

Landlords and letting agents will have access to information about potential tenants’ rent payment history under an initiative launched by one of the UK’s three credit reference agencies.

Experian’s Rent Exchange will rely on information provided by private landlords and letting agents. The reference agency estimates it will take 12 months to sign up sufficient landlords and letting agents, who will themselves have to pay a fee to access the data. They will only have access to a potential tenant’s past rental history, not other personal financial information.

It is anticipated that agents and landlords joining the scheme will include clauses in tenancy agreements to ensure tenants allow their rent history to be shared.

Aware of potential criticism, Experian has reassured tenants that where there is a genuine dispute over a missed payment, information would not appear until the dispute was resolved. Similarly, tenants would not be penalised where late rent payments were caused by delay in the administration of housing benefit, for which they could not be held responsible.

Experian’s Sian Williams was quick to point out the potential benefits to tenants: “This is a very welcome development for people living in private rented accommodation, who until now have often found it difficult to build a credit history,” she said.

We await further developments with interest and will keep you posted.

 

The Co-Operative Bank has released figures showing that one fifth of its recent buy-to-let business has come from “accidental landlords” – home owners forced into letting out their property because they have been unable to sell it and need no move. The phenomenon is generating something of a mini-boom in buy-to-let as more and more first time landlords enter the market. For the moment, this seems sustainable  -  research from ARLA shows that demand from tenants is still outstripping supply, meaning that in most parts of the country finding a tenant is unlikely to be a problem. However, home owners have been warned about the danger of taking on additional debt in an uncertain economic climate. A drop in rents or a rise in interest rates could leave many accidental landlords in a vulnerable position. In some cases, home owners would be advised to sell up, rather than let, even if that means selling at a discounted price.

 

Glasgow GP, Dr Tariq Mahmood, has been ordered to pay nearly £5000 for failure to maintain the gas boiler in a property let to students in Oxford.

A gas installer alerted the Health & Safety Executive after discovering that the boiler was out of order and could potentially expose the tenants to carbon monoxide poisoning.  HSE Inspector, Dozie Azubike explained “every year approximately 20 people die and many other suffer ill health from carbon monoxide poisoning.”

The HSE discovered that the boiler and flue had not be maintained for 2 years. Dr Mahmood pleaded guilty to breaches of gas safety regulations which require landlords to have all gas appliances in rented property checked once a year by a Gas Safe-registered engineer. Tenants have a legal right to demand a copy of the gas safety certificate for their property.

Oxford Brookes Student Union welcomed the outcome of the case.

 Posted by Christian on February 16, 2012 Landlords , ,  No Responses »
Feb 102012
 
Pets need a home too

I need a home too

A recent survey by the Dogs Trust found that many tenants are being hounded out of the lettings market because of the difficulty of finding rental properties which accept pets.  It seems that finding a suitable rental property for your pet requires dogged determination, with over half of people searching for between 2 months and a year before they found the purrfect home.

Of the 5,695 UK pet owners surveyed, one third could not find a suitable property. Letting Agents came in for some biting criticism with nearly half of respondents finding them to be “unhelpful”.

The Lets with Pets scheme launched by the Dogs Trust aims to persuade landlords and letting agents to take a “Pets Considered” approach, rather than rejecting all pets at a stroke.Lets with Pets

RentFair properties have always stated clearly whether pets are accepted, helping owners to find a pet-tolerant landlord quickly and easily without having to make numerous enquiries. We fully support the Dogs Trust’s excellent initiative.  For more information, go to their website:  www.letswithpets.org.uk

 Posted by Christian on February 10, 2012 Agents, Landlords, Pets , , ,  No Responses »
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