SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWS EMAILS
Friday, 8 May, 2026
No Result
View All Result
BestAdvice
  • News
  • Features
  • Blogs
  • Podcast
  • Research & Reports
  • Video
  • MORTGAGES
    • Mortgage type
      • Discount mortgages
      • Fixed rates
      • Fee-free
      • Interest-only
      • Offset
      • Remortgages
      • Trackers
      • Variable rates
    • Conveyancing
    • First time buyers
    • Green Mortgages
    • Help to Buy
    • New build
    • Overseas
    • Regulation
    • Self build
    • Shared ownership
  • BRIDGING
  • BTL
    • Consumer BTL
    • HMO/MUFB
    • Holiday Let
    • Limited Company BTL
  • COMMERCIAL
    • Asset finance
    • Auction finance
    • Commercial mortgages
    • Development finance
    • Invoice finance
    • SME finance
  • DISTRIBUTION
  • G.I.
  • LATER LIFE
    • Equity release
      • Lifetime mortages
      • Drawdown
    • Pensions
    • Retirement borrowing
  • LOANS
  • PROTECTION
    • Critical illness
    • Income protection
    • Group protection
    • Life cover
    • PMI
BestAdvice
  • MORTGAGES
    • Mortgage type
      • Discount mortgages
      • Fixed rates
      • Fee-free
      • Interest-only
      • Offset
      • Remortgages
      • Trackers
      • Variable rates
    • Conveyancing
    • First time buyers
    • Green Mortgages
    • Help to Buy
    • New build
    • Overseas
    • Regulation
    • Self build
    • Shared ownership
  • BRIDGING
  • BTL
    • Consumer BTL
    • HMO/MUFB
    • Holiday Let
    • Limited Company BTL
  • COMMERCIAL
    • Asset finance
    • Auction finance
    • Commercial mortgages
    • Development finance
    • Invoice finance
    • SME finance
  • DISTRIBUTION
  • G.I.
  • LATER LIFE
    • Equity release
      • Lifetime mortages
      • Drawdown
    • Pensions
    • Retirement borrowing
  • LOANS
  • PROTECTION
    • Critical illness
    • Income protection
    • Group protection
    • Life cover
    • PMI
No Result
View All Result
BestAdvice
No Result
View All Result

The Scottish government’s rental freeze is a wrong move

by Steve Cox
20 September 2022
The Scottish government’s rental freeze is a wrong move
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn

This is an important time for the buy-to-let market and the wider private rental sector for all manner of reasons. To say there are a huge number of growing pressures on this space would be something of an understatement.

From the increase in rates be they Bank Base Rate, swap or product, to the increase in the cost of living, to the lack of the supply in the PRS, to the introduction of a rental freeze by the Scottish government, to the potential for more stringent energy-efficiency measures for all rented properties, all these issues come together right now and have to be figured out by all stakeholders, specifically landlords themselves, their mortgage advisers, and us as lenders.

I’m writing this just before the new Chancellor, Kwasi Kwarteng, bring his ‘ad-hoc’ Budget to Parliament and therefore I’m not sure if there will be any measures or policies announced which may determine a change of direction for any of the above.

However, what I do know is that landlords are – on the whole – generally acquisitive and ambitious for portfolios, but they are certainly not going to put their money where their mouth is, if they continue to see profits/incomes hit by these variety of factors and by further government intervention.

LatestNews

Suffolk BS returns to 90% LTV market

SimplyBiz Mortgages to hold buy-to-let conference

Paradigm partners with Enable Services

Talking of which, I have had some time to digest the Scottish government’s decision to freeze private rents north of the border, and my mind has not been changed one iota that this is the wrong decision at the wrong time, and is likely to bring further problems for Scottish tenants in the form of falling supply and, ultimately, rising rents.

Detail is scarce on how the Scottish government intends to introduce (and police) this measure but, you would not need to be a policy genius, to work out that this is likely to end in tears.

For example, not only is there a freeze on rents to be introduced but also a moratorium on evictions. Not only will we see Scottish landlords unable to increase rents to deal with increased costs but, presumably, if tenants decide they are not going to pay during this period, they won’t be able to evict those non-payers either.

I’m struggling to see how, in a sector which is already short of supply, this doesn’t end up with fewer landlords offering fewer properties to the Scottish PRS. Take away the ability of a landlord to evict a non-payer, and their ability to charge a market rent in order to cover all their costs – which have been on the rise for any number of years – and you leave many landlord owners with little choice but to sell up.

Heads of landlord groups, trade bodies and associations are already providing many examples of their members talking along these lines, and the fact the Scottish government did not consult any of these prior to making its announcement, perhaps tells you everything you need to know about the veracity of such a policy.

My other concern here is not just about the potential for such a policy to be introduced in other areas of the country, but also around what measure the Scottish government is using to determine the success (or otherwise) of this policy?

At the end of March next year – should that be the actual end date which seems wholly unlikely – it will deem that no Scottish tenant had their rent increased and no-one was evicted. Whether that is truly the case remains to be seen, however, the ‘success’ of such a policy is only truly going to be revealed in the months and years after it has finished.

A year after the end date, how will PRS supply have been impacted? What will lower supply mean for rents? We know exactly what it means in a market with no intervention, but what about after? How much will rents have increased to make up for the period when landlords were not allowed to increase them? How many non-paying tenants will have been evicted and at what cost?

The ‘success’ can’t just be judged on the period of the freeze/eviction moratorium, it has to be on the medium to long-term impact on the Scottish PRS, tenants, and landlords? History tends to show us exactly what the result of rent freezes will be – lest we forget, this has been tried before and ended in spectacular failure. In fact, in almost every example, the supply of rental property available was pretty much decimated to a degree where the policy was stopped.

However, perhaps the Scottish government believes this time will be different? What I do however foresee is that the end of March certainly won’t see the end of this policy. And, in my view, the longer this goes on, the greater damage it will inflict to the overall market. If we thought supply north of the border was a problem now, we ain’t – in my opinion – seen nothing yet.

Steve Cox is chief commercial officer at Fleet Mortgages

Previous Post

First 4 Bridging rebrands to Envelop

Next Post

Suffolk BS returns to self build and expat lending

Have you read the latest news?

NatWest returns to 90% LTV mortgage lending
first-time buyers

Suffolk BS returns to 90% LTV market

14 September 2023
L&G reveals spring roadshow details
events

SimplyBiz Mortgages to hold buy-to-let conference

14 September 2023
Paradigm appoints director of mortgages
energy efficiency

Paradigm partners with Enable Services

14 September 2023
HTB appoints head of sales for bridging finance
seven-bed HMO

HTB completes £3.6m BTL/bridging finance package

14 September 2023
Five new deals from Fleet Mortgages
buy-to-let

The Mortgage Lender cuts five-year BTL rates

13 September 2023
Four new appointments at Saffron for Intermediaries
revamp

Saffron for Intermediaries bolsters self-employed proposition

13 September 2023
Next Post
Ipswich BS distribution expanded with mortgage club appointment

Suffolk BS returns to self build and expat lending

Bluestone Mortgages appoints Midlands key account manager

Assetz Capital appoints Midlands based 'originator'

The Skipton becomes an internal ratings based lender

Skipton BS extends current product switch window

OPINIONS

Don’t widen the protection gap

A continuous focus on marketing pays dividends

10 September 2023
Accord Buy-to-Let cuts fixed rates

Has the Bank Base Rate finally peaked?

10 September 2023
CPI inflation remains negative

Inflation is often misunderstood

3 September 2023
Anticipating the Autumn Statement

It makes sense for lenders to target high LTV business

1 September 2023
Election making adviser uncertainty worse

Why you need to continually appraise where your business is at

1 September 2023
  • Subscribe
  • Advertise
  • Backlinks
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & Conditions
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR ALERTS!

© 2022 Bedazzled Media Limited.
Company Number 11335497. Registered Office: Unit 1, E.M.P. Building, 4 Solent Road, Havant, Hampshire PO9 1JH

X
No Result
View All Result
  • MORTGAGES
    • Mortgage type
      • Discount mortgages
      • Fixed rates
      • Fee-free
      • Interest-only
      • Offset
      • Remortgages
      • Trackers
      • Variable rates
    • Conveyancing
    • First time buyers
    • Green Mortgages
    • Help to Buy
    • New build
    • Overseas
    • Regulation
    • Self build
    • Shared ownership
  • BRIDGING
  • BTL
    • Consumer BTL
    • HMO/MUFB
    • Holiday Let
    • Limited Company BTL
  • COMMERCIAL
    • Asset finance
    • Auction finance
    • Commercial mortgages
    • Development finance
    • Invoice finance
    • SME finance
  • DISTRIBUTION
  • G.I.
  • LATER LIFE
    • Equity release
      • Lifetime mortages
      • Drawdown
    • Pensions
    • Retirement borrowing
  • LOANS
  • PROTECTION
    • Critical illness
    • Income protection
    • Group protection
    • Life cover
    • PMI

© 2022 Bedazzled Media Limited.
Company Number 11335497. Registered Office: Unit 1, E.M.P. Building, 4 Solent Road, Havant, Hampshire PO9 1JH

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.