Landlord Warm Homes support vital, says committee

Lower-income landlords must be prioritised for support, or they may be unable to fund retrofit work, the Government is warned.

Private landlords should receive targeted support from the Government’s £5billion Warm Homes Fund to help meet proposed EPC requirements for privately rented homes, according to the Committee on Fuel Poverty.

It says lower-income landlords should be prioritised as many may struggle to fund the energy-efficiency improvements needed to bring properties up to the proposed standard.

All privately rented homes will need to achieve an EPC rating of C by 2030.

Warm Homes Fund

Responding to a Government consultation on the Warm Homes Fund, the committee says: “The Warm Homes Fund could have an important role to play in the private rented sector.”

It adds: “If it is targeted in the right way, then the Fund could support landlords in achieving Social Rented Sector and Private Rented Sector Minimum Energy Efficiency Standards.

Targeting lower-income landlords will enable retrofit work to be completed that may not otherwise have been possible.”

“Targeting lower-income landlords will enable retrofit work to be completed that may not otherwise have been possible.”

The committee is also calling for support to engage landlords and develop specific incentives for the sector, arguing that resources must be properly targeted if they are to benefit fuel-poor tenants.

Its recommendations have been welcomed by the National Residential Landlords Association, which has submitted its own proposals for how the fund should operate.

Incentives

The NRLA says the fund should encourage lenders to develop products created specifically for properties with lower EPC ratings and enable finance models that combine private investment with grants and tax incentives.

It also argues that support should reflect the different circumstances of small and large landlords, as well as leaseholders in multi-occupancy buildings.

It warns, however, that “without a tailored approach” there is a risk support will fail to reach many of the properties needing upgrades, which could have “a devastating impact on the supply of homes to let”.


One Comment

  1. I am constantly seeing EPCs with D & E ratings on stone detached country properties. These are not luxury houses they are just standard homes off the gas grid and heating with oil/electric/stoves etc. No count seems to be taken of the fact that thick stone walls act as their own insulation.
    The estimates to bring these properties up to C Grade range from £18k to as high as £43k no landlord is going to spend or be able to spend that amount without putting rents up many times the heat saving.
    The result will be many more landlords selling yet we seem as an industry to be sleepwalking into more chaos yet again. The impact on tenants in rural areas throughout the country will be devastating pursuing a policy which is not making a jot of difference to world.

What's your opinion?

Back to top button