Lo standard delle case dignitose per gli affittuari privati ​​nel Regno Unito è stato rinviato dal governo fino al 2035

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2026/jan/28/decent-homes-standard-uk-private-renters-delayed-2035?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

di Confident-Bike-8037

11 commenti

  1. BalianofReddit on

    So never?

    2035 is the back end of any hypothetical labour run in government

    There is no way the inevitable tory or proto-tory government at that point will allow this bill to be enforced.

  2. Prestigious_Spot9635 on

    Atleast renters have freedom to quick exit a rental agreement with renters reform. However. This is still disappointing from labour. A whole decade…nonetheless it seems they work hard go push put small landlords so not big issue for me.

  3. wkavinsky on

    > The government’s promise to make private rented homes fit for habitation will not be enforced for almost a decade

    Who needs to live in a habitable home, am I right?

    Conveniently also means the proposals have to survive two more general elections before landlords have to think about spending money on their shitboxes (decent landlords would already not be affected by this).

  4. Stubbzyy on

    From the Gov.uk website:

    Part 1: Overview
    1. Everyone deserves to live in a home that is safe and decent. All tenants should be able to feel proud of where they live and be treated with respect. Yet millions of people continue to live in sub-standard, in some cases dangerous, homes.

    Oh so we’ll just make the current standard continue for another decade, thats great. Gang of twats, honestly.

  5. Ok-Commission-7825 on

    I clearly remember Labour fans pointing me to this when I said Labour weren’t doing much for us and asking why I wasn’t excited about it… this is why – it hardly needed Nostrodamus to foresee.

  6. wildeaboutoscar on

    I can see both sides to this as I work in the sector. The social housing sector in particular needs to both build new homes and maintain existing stock and realistically there isn’t much money to do both, alongside even more regulation.

    We already have the decent homes standard in social housing but the new one is likely to include things like flooring that will need to be funded and that could take time to pull together.

    Much as I don’t want to excuse private landlords either, it is a big change for them and they will need time to plan and implement as well. The social housing sector already has a headstart here.

    I am interested in seeing the interplay between decent homes, HHSRS and Awaab’s law as they will increasingly be looking at similar things.

    Obviously the risk in delaying until 2035 is we are likely to have another government do the actual work implementing it. Which isn’t ideal.

  7. Astriania on

    2035 means ‘not happening’, we’ll almost certainly have a different government by then who can just cancel it.

    As coffeewalnut08 mentions several times across the thread, Labour are delivering *some* improvements for renters in the other Act, but that still doesn’t mean it’s fine for this to get pushed into the long grass.

  8. AuroraHalsey on

    I suspect they’re delaying it because they know enforcing it would make a ton of people homeless.

    There aren’t enough homes that meet the standard, the landlords that don’t meet the standard will have to evict their tenants, and the country doesn’t have the construction capacity to upgrade those homes in time.

  9. Minimum_Definition75 on

    Interesting that the only two sensible decisions the government have made about the PRS are this week.

    The reality of the impact the RRA is going to have on supply in a few months has hit.

    Moving this and the EPC dates back may give a few landlords the confidence to stay in the market a bit longer.

    I have always believed improving standards is necessary. But targeting private landlords (who aren’t any worse than social ones) before they address the supply issue was always going to be a disaster.

    Build more social housing, wait for the large commercial landlords to build new properties (or buy up existing ones) before you punish private landlords further.

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