New polling has found that four in ten households renting privately who moved within the last year are paying an average £1,200 a year above the advertised rate for their property.
The polling, carried out for the New Economics Foundations (NEF), shows how those looking for homes to rent are often forced into bidding wars which severely hike the price they pay for the property, and leave others completely priced out.
The survey of 1,001 people across England shows:
Alex Diner, senior researcher at NEF, said: ‘Everybody deserves to be able to afford a safe, secure and warm place to live, but this data shows just how difficult it can be for many people to find somewhere to call home.
‘The lack of affordable housing across the country forces people to enter into bidding wars, which end up meaning the rent they pay goes through the roof. And all too often, the properties they end up living in are cold and damp, with landlords who are not always willing to help.
‘Not only must the government stop backsliding on its commitment to reform the private rental sector, it also has an opportunity to make a real difference here. In the short term, ministers must take action to ban these bidding wars. In the long term, building a new generation of high-quality, genuinely affordable social homes would ease the pressures on the housing market and provide people across the country with somewhere to live, rest and flourish.’
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