Gloves are off! Agents and suppliers urge Gove to stop slamming landlords
Ten agents, suppliers and trade association figures also want rest of lettings industry to sign their open letter and back their campaign.

Ten leading figures from the property industry have confronted housing secretary Michael Gove (pictured) head on over the increasing crisis engulfing the private rental sector, and in particularly his Government’s role in creating it through its ongoing suppression of private landlord activity.
An open letter has been initially signed a clutch of industry seniors and CEOs including Ben Beadle (NRLA), Theresa Wallace (Savills), Eric Walker (Martin & Co), Peter Knight (Property Academy), William Reeve (Goodlord), Gary Wright (Flatfair), Heidi Shackell (The Lettings Hub), Ben Grech (Reposit), Chris Hutchinson (Canopy) and Kristjan Byfield (The Depositary).
But the group are also urging other suppliers and agents to sign the letter to lend its points more weight with Gove.
Within the letter (see full version below) they say Government policies are stoking housing inflation, raising rents, putting off landlords from investing in the PRS and, consequently, achieving the very opposite of what the looming Renters Reform Bill hopes to achieve.
The letter in full:
To: The Minister of State for Housing and Planning (Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities)
We, the undersigned, are business leaders within the Private Rented Sector across the UK. With inflation hitting levels not seen since October 1981, we believe that current government policy in the rental sector — covering 35% of UK homes — is stoking housing inflation, the largest single component of the cost of living.
As set out in the recent Renters’ Reform Bill White Paper, current policy objectives include improving the quality of housing and giving tenants greater peace of mind about being evicted. These are worthy objectives which we, and most tenants, support. But tenants – whether professionals or students – also want their housing to be affordable, and current policy appears to ignore this point.
A recent survey of tenants confirms that rising levels of rent are tenants’ biggest single concern, cited by 86% of respondents. By contrast, the condition of rented properties, a priority of the Renters’ Reform Bill, while also a significant concern, is cited by fewer than half as many tenants: 42%.
Government policies to restrict landlords’ legal rights, raise minimum energy efficiency standards to an EPC band C, extend mandatory local licensing, raise taxes on property income and transactions, enhance compliance obligations for HMOs, and increase maintenance costs are putting undue pressure on landlords — most of whom have only one or two rental properties. Already, we see net negative repercussions on rental supply, with many landlords leaving the sector; property portal data shows that supply is down 46% compared with the five year average.
At the same time, tenant demand is at an all time high, with portal traffic up 142%. Many surviving landlords are understandably looking to cover their increased costs via higher rents. Goodlord’s Rental Index saw rents on new tenancies in September hit £1,249 pcm, up 13% on the same period in 2021. Rent increases restrict mobility and supply, with tenants frightened to move house for fear of facing even higher rents in a new home.
By failing to encourage adequate supply, government policy is directly contributing to the sharp increases in rental prices.
Freezing rents in response, as recently introduced in Scotland and proposed by London’s Mayor, would further damage the sector, restricting supply to a greater extent and fuelling landlords’ withdrawal from the sector.
We urge the government instead to consider ways to improve supply – while continuing its aspirations to ensure quality homes for tenants – by ensuring the rental sector remains an attractive place to invest without relying on skyrocketing — and ultimately inflationary — rents.











Please take the 10 seconds needed to sign the open letter. Unless we show a united front and deliver big numbers government will continue to dismiss much of what we attempt to convey.
This is where Govt & Councils completely getting it wrong. Constantly attacking ALL landlords forgetting about the 80% of tenants that haven’t got a problem. Consequently, the good tenants get punished with limited supply & higher rents-They’ve done nothing wrong.