London bounces back – rents set to rise 5.5% in 2022

London bounces back – rents set to rise 5.5% in 2022


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Rental values across the capital have not only bounced back compared to the pandemic dip in 2020, but they have also breached pre-pandemic levels in all but three areas.

The research from Benham and Reeves shows that between 2019 and the initial pandemic year of 2020, the average London rent fell by 3.4%.

The impact was far greater across many parts of the London market, with Camden seeing rental values plummet 20.7% in a year, while the City of London was also one of the hardest hit with a 12.6% reduction.

However, as the capital has slowly returned to business in 2021, tenant demand has also returned, and current rental values now sit 9.4% higher than they did during 2020.

The pandemic continues to have an influence, with London’s bordering boroughs still seeing the strongest performance. Rents are up 20.1% year-on-year in Kingston, with Bexley (18.3%), Newham (15%), Croydon (14.1%) and Hillingdon (13.6%) also amongst the largest increases.

Meanwhile, the City of London remains the only area yet to recover, with rental values still down 11.4% annually.

While a bounceback from pandemic decline is encouraging, the real positivity lies within the fact that the average London rent is now 5.7% higher than it was in 2019, prior to the market slowdown.

In fact, just the City of London (22.5%), Camden (18.9%) and Westminster (4.6%) are yet to see rental market values return to pre-pandemic levels.

Benham and Reeves also noted that the volume of properties they are seeing let to tenants has risen 67% year-on-year and 22.7% versus pre-pandemic levels, while landlords are now securing re-let rental prices some 10% to 20% higher than they were prior to the Covid-19 outbreak.

With a further revival now coming in the form of foreign tenant demand, the outlook is ‘extremely positive’ for 2022 and Benham and Reeves believes this confidence in the market will bring a further 5.5% increase to rental values in addition to the market bounceback already witnessed in 2021.

Director Marc von Grundherr says we’re unlikely to see a period of such unexpected uncertainty again in our lifetime.

He comments: “Demand for rental homes evaporates almost overnight during the pandemic causing a surplus of stock on the market while rental prices plummeted. But the London market is nothing but resilient and when the tide starts to turn, it turns very quickly indeed.”

“We’ve seen house prices in the capital enjoy the largest monthly bounce of all regions in a single month having trailed the rest of the nation for almost two years and the same revival is also apparent across the rental market.”

He adds: “Demand is lifting and rental values have not only recovered, but they’ve also exceeded levels seen prior to the pandemic. Even better still, we’re seeing further positivity in the trenches and this current market activity is yet to materialise at a topline level where market statistics are concerned.”

“As a result, we can say with confidence that the London rental market decline is now firmly behind us and so any lower confidence forecasts of further price reductions can now be disregarded with yet further positive growth forecast for 2022.”

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