Gli affitti diminuiscono ogni anno per la prima volta in 15 anni: il nuovo inquilino tipico ora paga 10 sterline in meno al mese

https://www.thisismoney.co.uk/money/buytolet/article-15470117/Rents-fall-annually-time-15-years-Typical-new-tenant-pays-10-month.html

di Dimmo17

17 commenti

  1. How_do_I_work_this_ on

    Oh gosh, what will we do with all that extra money

  2. foodieshoes on

    Wow, a whole £10/month less! That’ll undo all those £50/month rises year-on-year rises tenants typically expect through the post on an annual basis.

  3. Don’t worry some other subscription service will swallow that tenner quicker than you can blink

  4. ihatethisplacepoop on

    You just know some politicians are going to take this as a great win for us plebs

  5. jasonbirder on

    Hehe I knew I’d look at the responses and they’d all be explaining how this isn’t actually any good (rents falling)

  6. inverseinternet on

    Finally, we can stop catastrophising. The End of Austerity and more money in our pockets. We’ve never had it so good.

  7. sefianiy on

    It is weird to think that rent not going up is already a win for most of Londoners

  8. The first ever record fall in rental price index since 2011, whilst median wage increases are around 4% and all people will do is moan!

  9. Jo3Pizza22 on

    What’s with all of these comments. Of course £10 a month is not making a meaningful difference to anyone, but this is good news. Would you rather average rent had increased again?

  10. phunter79 on

    Then why the fuck is mine going up again for the 3rd year in a row!

  11. parkway_parkway on

    I think we may be at the peak.

    Birthrates have been low and crashing for a while.

    Immigration is falling.

    The economy is completely boned.

    House prices are high as a multiple of wages.

    I think it’s quite possible house prices and rents will rise slower than inflation for quite a while now and the whole market will deflate. It feels hard to imagine a huge run of house price appreciation.

    In real terms house prices are back to where they were at in 2006 (though that’s mostly because everything else got expensive too, they’re still much costlier compared to wages).

    The future is totally impossible to predict, and imo the main drivers of rent and house prices are going to stall out.

  12. SubjectCraft8475 on

    Where i live in the midlands rents have gone down around £100-£1200. Basically a 3 bedroom house is around £1100 – £1200. When t was around £1200-£1300. Seen someone advertise recently for £1300 where ut use to be easy to get to then drop down to £1150 with new tennants.

    I think this is mainly due to many foreign students no longer coming to the UK who bring their families. Usually the type of people who use student visas with an intention to work here and then settle.

  13. Only-the-bright-side on

    All have a seen are prices going up by £200-300. Privet renting is a nightmare.

  14. setokaiba22 on

    Are these prices in the room with us? Most people have see rents sky rocket the past few years so they are still ridiculously high

  15. Only_Quote_Simpsons on

    My flat was £710pm, then £770, then £830.

    I handed in my notice and purchased a home, the landlord relisted the property for £970pm. It was quickly snapped up by someone.

    Rent is so expensive, I appreciate that landlords have costs, but a lot of it is just greed.

    It also didn’t help that the rent increase always took effect in December every year, it made the whole thing feel even more impersonal.

    I am glad I have a better paid job now, if I was on minimum wage, I would never escape the rent trap.

  16. SquidgyB on

    I’ll believe it if/when my rent *doesn’t* go up in June/July…

  17. TRISTRAMSHANDY85 on

    £10! Oh wow brilliant. Meanwhile boomers own everything and we’re paying for someone’s else’s mortgage. What a capitalist shthole. They could enable rent control but there are 85 MPs who are landlords, owning 184 rental properties between them.

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