UKALA
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Latest property news
Agents face ‘chaotic’ scenes when new carbon monoxide rules go live – warning
UKALA is worried that as millions of PRS and social homes will soon need a carbon monoxide alarm, agents should act now, not wait.
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Regulation & Law
Broker warns many agents lack sufficient PI insurance
Insurance broker, MINT, has revealed how an alarming number of agents are at risk of having their licences revoked because of insufficient Professional Indemnity cover.
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Features
Business with benefits: belong to an industry body
It can be a lonely world out there if you are an independent estate and/or letting agent. Richard Reed explores how the industry organisations can help your business.
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Features
Letting fees ban set for Spring 2019, but the devil remains in the detail
The Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government (MHCLG ) does not expect the letting fees ban to come into force until Spring 2019...
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Features
The Queen’s Speech delivers more bad news for letting agents
Richard Price, Executive Director of UKALA, outlines two clear problems arising from the Queen’s Speech.
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Features
Whisper it quietly, but landlords need all the help they can get!
It may just be a blip, but tough times are ahead and landlords need professional support.
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Features
UKALA. Not for cowboys: The magnificent seven of membership benefits
If you are a professional agent, rather than a gun-slinging bandit, you can demonstrate to landlords and tenants that you are one of the good guys.
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Features
UKALA Offering real value in professional development
Staff development is an essential part of running a successful business and it’s the best way to improve knowledge and competence across the company. But finding time to review development opportunities or training needs is not always easy.
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Latest property news
29% of landlords may drop their agent after tenant fees ban, says research
The likely consequences of the tenant fees ban for agents has been highlighted by research from UKALA among landlords. Carried out in partnership with the National Landlords Association among nearly 700 landlords, the research reveals that 71% of those who use a letting agent will continue to do so even if their costs rise following a tenant fees ban, although this also suggests that nearly a third of landlords will not. Nearly 80% of landlords said they expect agent to increase their fees after a ban, while only 9% said they’d switch to self-managing their properties after it comes in. UKALA says it is critical of the ban, and argues that “affordability in the private-rented sector cannot be addressed by preventing agents from charging for legitimate business services, and that the costs will eventually be passed on to tenants in the long-term,” it says. The research also suggests that 40% of landlords are likely to increase rents to cover the additional costs, while just 9% are prepared to pay the extra costs themselves. “UKALA agents strive to provide a premium service which represents excellent value for money, but the ban on tenant fees could leave hundreds of professional businesses with…
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Latest property news
Nearly half of landlords may drop letting agents
Forty seven percent of the 1.1 million landlords who use letting agents say they would self-manage their properties if their profits begin to fall following the taxation changes due to kick in next year. From April next year tax relief available to landlords is being gradually reduced for higher and additional rate taxpayers and will only be available at the basic rate from 2020. This means for example that a 40% tax payer who currently pays £1,680 tax on a rental income of 15,000 will pay £6,000 in tax in four years’ time. “A significant number of landlords will be hit hard by the tax changes and agents’ fees will be one of the items underneath the magnifying glass if profits begin to decrease,” says Richard Price, Executive Director of the The UK Association of Letting Agents (UKALA), which carried out the research. It asked 900 investors about the tax changes during a survey in September to assess the impact the extra tax burden might have on letting agents’ businesses. The findings were highly variable depending on where the landlords were operating. For example, 56% of Scottish agents canvassed said they would ditch their agent if profits were squeezed, while…
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