Tenants are paying significantly more in rent this year than last.
Rents on new tenancies signed on a UK rental property outside of London over the three months to April 2016 were 5.1% higher than in the same period of last year.
Research from tenant referencing firm HomeLet showed that in the capital, meanwhile, rents on new tenancies signed over the three months to the end of April were 7.7% higher than a year ago, the third successive month that London has registered this rate of increase.
Rents in Scotland are currently rising faster than anywhere else in the UK, with new tenancies costing 11.4% more than in the same period a year ago.
However, the East Midlands, registering a rise of 7.9% in rents compared to last year, is hot on Scotland’s heels and tops the table of English regions by rental inflation.
London’s rental market, where the average rent on a new tenancy is now £1,543, also continues to see rents rise more quickly than in most other areas of the country.
The 2.6 percentage point gap between rent rises on new tenancies in London and the rest of the UK, where rents average £764, is barely changed on last month (2.8 percentage points).
Just one area of the country, the North West of England, saw lower rents on new tenancies over the three months to March – as was the case in last month’s index.
However, the speed at which rents are falling in the region continues to slow, to an annual rate of just 1% over the three months to April, compared to 3.5% over the three months to March.
Rents agreed on new tenancies in April alone were 1.7% higher than in March.
Martin Totty, Barbon Insurance Group’s chief executive officer, said: “The April HomeLet Rental Index has been much anticipated given the potential impact of the Stamp Duty changes on the private rental market; for now, however, rental price growth in most areas of the country is unchanged from the trends observed over almost three years.
“It may be that over the next several months, the trends observed in the rental market begin to reflect the signs of some slowdown in the rate of house price growth that we are now beginning to see and that will be something to watch closely.
“But more broadly, there has been very little to alter the fundamental relationship between demand and supply, especially in those parts of the country where demand-side pressure is greatest.
“For now it’s business as usual, which may be better news for landlords than for tenants, though landlords will no doubt be feeling the squeeze too given the various taxation changes they now need to budget for.
“We will have to see whether landlords try to pass their higher costs on, whether buy-to-let property investment diminishes in popularity and whether tenants are able to afford further increases in rents.”