Being a Huddersfield landlord is undoubtedly a challenge. The glory years of making money from ‘any old property’ are certainly in the past. With increased legislation and taxation from Government and the cost-of-living crisis (which will result in some Huddersfield tenants struggling to pay their rent), times are challenging for many landlords.
Then newspapers are full of stories of landlords
being pushed into the red as mortgage rates continue to rise. A landlord last
summer could have fixed their 5-year buy-to-let rate with a 25% deposit at 1.86%,
whilst today the best 5-year deal is with Barclays at 4.36%. This increase will
add more than £246 per month to the landlord's mortgage bill for the average UK
buy-to-let property.
Landlords’ mortgages stand at £237.81bn,
meaning collectively, landlords could have to pay an additional £7.11 billion
per year in mortgage interest payments.
Next,
the press is reporting in Q2 2022 (when compared to Q2 2021), landlord possession claims for arrears increased from 6,997 to 18,201 properties (a rise of 160%),
property orders from 5,431 to 14,319 (an increase of 164%), warrants from 3,786
to 7,728 (a rise of 104%) and landlord repossessions from 1,582 to 4,900 (a
rise of 210%).
This
is on the back of the Section 24 tax changes made a few years ago and ahead of
expensive energy efficiency upgrades that the Government is expected to
legislate for in the coming 12 months.
Doesn’t
sound good for landlords.
Until
you look past the headlines and look at the actual detail.
79.93%
of UK buy-to-let (BTL) mortgages are interest-only mortgages (compared to
12.29% of homebuyers), meaning the repayments are considerably lower than
typical homebuyer mortgages. Therefore, the rise in interest rates won’t hit
landlords’ profitability as much as many thought initially.
93.21%
of all new BTL mortgages agreed in the last two years have been on a fixed rate
mortgage, and 73.27% of all existing BTL mortgages are on a fixed rate. So, the
increase in mortgage payments will only affect one in four landlords on
variable-rate mortgages.
Let us
not forget that less than one in three landlords have a BTL mortgage, meaning
two out of three landlords aren’t affected by these interest rate rises.
The average rent of a Huddersfield
property is now £849 per month, an impressive rise of 8.3% compared to a year
ago.
Those
possession orders mentioned above look high until you realise that there are
4.4 million properties in the private rented sector. That means only 2.04% of
UK rental properties had arrears bad enough for landlords (or agents) to start
possession proceedings to evict the tenant. Also, only 0.045% of tenants were
evicted through the courts in a calendar year.
Talking of arrears, recent studies using statistics from the
Government and other letting industry sources show that …
landlords who didn't use
a letting agent to manage their property were 272.5% more likely to be two
months or more in rent arrears in 2021. It pays to use a letting agent!
Next,
the potential cost of upgrading rental properties' energy efficiency.
The
proposed changes in the MEES regulations require a minimum energy efficiency
(measured by its Energy Performance Certificate (EPC)) to a ‘C’ rating on new
tenancies from 2025 and existing tenancies by 2028. That will cost, on average,
£10,000+ per property.
Yet
it cannot be forgotten when the rules changed in 2018 properties had to have a
minimum EPC rating of E in England and Wales to be legally compliant. If a
landlord of an 'F' or 'G' rated rental property could prove that it would cost
more than £3,500 to make those improvements to their EPC rating, then that was
the most the landlord had to pay. No doubt something similar will take place in
the future proposed legislation.
Then
there is the profitability of renting. Rental yields are the primary guide to
profitability in buy-to-let.
Yields are starting to rise as
Huddersfield rental growth is beginning
to outstrip Huddersfield house price
growth.
The average yields being achieved in Huddersfield
today are …
- 1 bed – 6.0% yield
- 2 bed – 5.2% yield
- 3 bed – 4.0% yield
- 4 bed – 3.3% yield
- 5 bed – 2.7% yield
Yet investing in buy-to-let isn't just about the
yield.
Demand from tenants plays a massive part in the
success or failure of your buy-to-let investment, so other yardsticks, such as
void periods, should be considered. There is no point in securing a
higher-yielding rental property if that buy-to-let investment remains empty.
My research has found that
the Huddersfield overall void period average so far is 41.4% lower than 18
months ago, reducing from 29 days in April 2021 to 17 days in September 2022
(the void period being the time it takes from the date of an old tenant moving
out until the new tenant moves in).
Finally, buy-to-let
investment is also an excellent hedge against inflation compared to other
investments. If you would like more information on that, drop me a line, as
it's too long to post here.
In conclusion, the days of buying any old
Huddersfield buy-to-let property at any price and making loads of money from it
as easy as falling off a log are gone!
The next few years will be
challenging for everyone. Still, with the advice and opinion of a decent
Huddersfield letting agent to guide and support you on your buy-to-let journey,
buy-to-let will continue to be a profitable investment.
You need to review your
rental portfolio regularly. See how your portfolio measures up against yield vs
capital growth see-saw. Review your mortgage financing and EPC status of your
portfolio.
If you would like a
no-obligation chat with me to discuss your options as a new potential landlord
or an existing landlord with a rental portfolio, then let's talk.
Let us see whether your
expectations from buy-to-let match your potential investment in Huddersfield
property. I look forward to you picking up the phone or sending me a message
for a no-obligation chat.
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