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º£½ÇÊÓÆµ rental market: Rents rise at slowest rate for four years as supply of homes increases

Average rents are 2.4 per cent higher than a year ago, the lowest annual rate in four years and less than half of that recorded 12 months ago, Zoopla has said.

Supply has improved and demand has eased(Image: Getty Images Europe)

Soaring rents across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ have shifted to a more measured rise as housing supply increases and tenant demand diminishes, fresh data shows.

Average rents have climbed 2.4 per cent compared to a year earlier, marking the lowest annual growth in four years and less than half the rate recorded 12 months previously, Zoopla has revealed, as reported by .

Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla, noted that conditions are "starting to normalise", explaining that reduced migration and improved mortgage accessibility for first-time buyers has "eas[ed] the scale of the competition for rented homes."

"There is also more choice for renters with more homes for rent as landlords start to buy homes once again and some owners who can't find a buyer listing their homes for rent," Donnell said.

However, rental demand continues to exceed pre-pandemic levels owing to the unaffordability of homeownership, which is confining people to private renting across numerous regions.

Rental expansion is projected to reach three per cent throughout 2025.

Peter Maskell, managing director of Brock Taylor, commented: "For landlords, success now hinges on being realistic with pricing and ensuring properties are both well-presented and well-located, as these are the homes that continue to attract strong demand even as the market steadies."

London market still yet to ease

London rents climbed by approximately 40 per cent between 2021 and 2024 as enormous demand following a succession of national lockdowns was exacerbated by rising interest rates due to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. "While the situation is improving, the London market remains tighter than in other parts of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ," Zoopla said.