Rental market faces new ‘challenges’ as more landlords demand guarantors

17th July 2023
Home > News > Rental market faces new ‘challenges’ as more landlords demand guarantors

Reported by MARC DA SILVA Property Industry Eye

There has been a notable increase in the number of tenants being asked to provide a guarantor to secure a rental property, new research has revealed, as lack of supply and inflationary pressures push up average rental prices and landlords seek out additional assurances from tenants.

Goodlord analysed more than 220,000 tenancies taken out between January 2020 and June 2023. Its data reveals a steady increase in requests for renters who earn between £25,000 and £74,999 to provide a guarantor. The average salary for a full-time employee in Britain in 2022 was £33,000. In 2020, it was £31,461.

In 2020, just 3.7% of tenants earning salaries of between £25,000 and £49,999 were asked to provide a guarantor by their letting agents or landlord. However, in 2023 to date, this has risen to an average of 5.84% of all tenants – an increase of 58% compared to 2020 figures. This means requests for guarantors are now far higher than even at the peak of the pandemic, when hundreds of thousands of renters were placed on furlough or faced an increased chance of redundancy.

With landlords facing new pressures, including rising interest rates pushing up mortgage costs, many are seeking out the security of a guarantor when agreeing new tenancies. This acts as an extra layer of insurance against unforeseen circumstances, such as a tenant losing their job and being unable to pay rent.

Perhaps more surprisingly, there has also been an increase recorded in the number of tenants earning between £50,000 and £74,999 each year being asked to provide guarantors, despite salaries in this range being far higher than national averages.

In 2020, just 1.35% of earners in this bracket were required to secure their tenancy with a guarantor. In 2021, this rose to 1.41%, before rising again in 2022 to 1.92%. However, in 2023 to date, the average number of tenants commanding salaries of £50,000 to £74,999 being asked to provide a guarantor is 2.59%. Despite still being a very small percentage of renters in this income bracket, this represents a 92% increase on 2020 levels.

Goodlord expect the level of guarantor requests to rise throughout the rest of 2023, with rental prices predicted to peak over the summer months. According to Goodlord’s monthly Rental Index, in 2023 to date, the average cost of a rental property in England has been £1,099 per property per month, rising to £1,871 per month for properties in London.

This is up from an average price of £937 per property per month in 2020. In London, the average price of a property in 2020 was £1,612.

As tenants face these increased rental costs, many are seeing a greater proportion of their take home pay go towards rent. As a result, this means more renters are having to provide the additional security of a guarantor when signing a new tenancy.

Oli Sherlock, director of insurance at Goodlord, said: “The rental market is facing a series of overlapping challenges. We’ve spent years not building enough homes, meaning the supply of rental stock is low. This is being compounded by landlords – who are facing rising costs and ever more complex regulation – selling up and leaving the market.

“This supply and demand problem means rents are rising at a time when tenants have less disposable income thanks to the cost-of-living crisis. This means more tenants are being asked to show they have the support in place to meet their rental obligations, should they need it. As well as a rise in the number of tenants who find themselves needing to provide a guarantor, we’ve also seen a big increase in landlords taking out rental insurance.

“It’s a far from ideal situation for either tenants or landlords. The government should see this as an additional sign that more support for the rental market is urgently needed.”


Share this article
  • icon
  • icon

Related News Articles

Falls in UK mortgage costs predicted amid return of ultra-low interest rates

Banks and building societies look set to cut the costs of UK fixed-rate mortgages in the short- to medium-term after the International Monetary Fund (IMF) predicted that ultra-low interest rates will soon return with inflation due to fall sharply in the coming months. A number of homeowners have been hit hard by a steep increase in mortgage costs in recent months. But the Unit...

12/04/2023
Bank maintains interest rate at 5.25%

The base interest rate remains at 5.25% after the Bank of England’s Monetary Policy Committee voted 5-4 against an increase. Many commentators had expected another rise in the rate, but the surprise fall in inflation probably prompted a rethink. Inflation fell slightly last month to 6.7% from 6.8% in July, prompting some analysts to predict that the Bank would steer away...

21/09/2023
Searching Overseas?

Our Overseas properties are listed on the popular portal 'A Place in the Sun'

08/01/2023
Rightmove reveals big rise in vendors coming to market

The housing market enjoyed its best day so far this year last week with a bumper number of sellers taking the plunge, says Rightmove. It reveals that Thursday 28 March, the last working day before the Easter break, was the biggest single day for the number of new sellers coming to market. And it was the third biggest day for new listings since August 2020, with...

08/04/2024