Well
my Stoke-on-Trent Property Blog reading friends, as seems to be all the rage
with Jeremy Corben asking the PM questions emailed in to him at Prime Minster
Question Times, I to wish to answer a question emailed into me from a potential
Stoke-on-Trent landlord last week. Nice chap, lives in Milton, and it turns
out, after having a coffee with him, he works in IT, has a spare bit of cash
(now the kids have flown the nest) and wanted to buy his first buy to let
property.
His main
question was ... Do I buy a freehold house or a leasehold flat in
Stoke-on-Trent?
Most
people will say freehold every time, because you own the land. However, it’s
not as simple as that (it never would be would it!). The definitive answer
though is to research what Stoke-on-Trent tenants want! The tenant is
ultimately your customer, and, if they don't want to rent what you decide is
best to buy, then you are not going to have a successful BTL investment. So
starting with the tenant in mind and working backwards from there, you won’t go
far wrong. In a nutshell, find the demand before you think about creating the
supply.
Leasehold
flats and apartments in Stoke-on-Trent are excellent in some respects as they
offer the landlord certain advantages, including the fact a flat can be
initially cheaper to buy. Yields can be quite good, offering better cash flow.
The building will already be insured and yes there is a service charge, but
it’s still for a service at the end of the day and that cost is spread between
many others (i.e. when your freehold house roof goes, its falls 100% on your
shoulders) and one of my favourites is that there is often no garden to
maintain or blown down fences to replace!
However, some Stoke-on-Trent leasehold flats can suffer from poor capital growth. Some leasehold properties have no cap on the level of the service charge and it may get out of control. The length of the lease will significantly affect value if not renewed before it gets too short. Thankfully there’s not many, but some Stoke-on-Trent apartments/flats have burdensome clauses. Finally, with leases, there can be sub-letting issues – which means you can’t let them out.
However, some Stoke-on-Trent leasehold flats can suffer from poor capital growth. Some leasehold properties have no cap on the level of the service charge and it may get out of control. The length of the lease will significantly affect value if not renewed before it gets too short. Thankfully there’s not many, but some Stoke-on-Trent apartments/flats have burdensome clauses. Finally, with leases, there can be sub-letting issues – which means you can’t let them out.
So
what do the numbers look like? Well since 2003, the average freehold property
in Stoke-on-Trent (detached, semis and terraced) has risen from £68,045 to
£127,379, a rise of 87% whilst the average Stoke-on-Trent leasehold property
(flats and apartments) has gone up in value from £65,333 to £89,079, a more
mediocre rise of 36%.
I
was really interested to note that of the 14,176 rental properties in the
Stoke-on-Trent City Council area that the Office of National Statistics believe
are either let privately or through a letting agency, 2,989 of them (or 21.1%)
are apartments. However, there are only 12,417 apartments in the whole council
area (be they owned, council rented or privately rented), which represents
11.5% of the whole housing stock in the area. This really intrigued me that,
quite obviously, there is a high proportion of Stoke-on-Trent’s leasehold
apartments/flats rented to tenants compared to detached, semi’s or terraced.
Fascinating don’t you think?
Every
Stoke-on-Trent apartment block, every terraced house or semi is different. Like
I said at the start, the definitive answer though is to research what
Stoke-on-Trent tenants want in the area of Stoke-on-Trent they want. Demand for
city centre apartments, near the nightlife and transport links can be popular
and can offer the Stoke-on-Trent landlord very good yields with minimal voids.
However, Stoke-on-Trent terraced houses and semis, whilst not always offering
the best yields (although sometimes they can), they do offer the Stoke-on-Trent
landlord decent capital growth.
My
advice to the prospective landlord as it is to you is do your homework. One such website, which only talks about the
local buy to let Property Market, is here "the Stoke-on-Trent Property
Blog". Another source of info many Stoke-on-Trent landlords use is me and
the team! What many Stoke-on-Trent landlords do, irrespective of whether you
are a landlord of ours, a landlord with another agent or a DIY landlord, if you
see any property in Stoke-on-Trent, that catches your eye as a potential buy to
let property, be it a terraced house, semi or flat ... email me and I will
email you back with my thoughts (although I will tell you what you need to hear
.. not necessarily what you want to hear!)
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