Yes, I said
‘rentirement’,
not retirement ... rentirement and it relates to the 2,239 (and growing) Stoke on
Trent people, who don’t own their own Stoke on Trent home but rent their home,
privately from a buy to let landlord and who are currently in their 50’s and
early to mid-60’s.
The truth is
that these Stoke on Trent people are prospectively soon to retire with little
more than their state pension of £155.95 per week, probably with a small
private pension of a couple of hundred pounds a month, meaning the average Stoke
on Trent retiree can expect to retire on about £200 a week once they retire at
67.
The average
rent in Stoke on Trent is £536 a month, so a lot of the retirement “income”
will be taken up in rent, meaning the remainder will have to be paid for out
their savings or the taxpayer will have to stump up the bill (and with life
expectancy currently in the mid to late 80’s, that is quite a big bill … a total of £288,024,960 over the next 20 years to be paid from the tenant’s
savings or the taxpayers coffers to be precise!
You might
say it’s not fair for Stoke on Trent tax payers to pick up the bill and that
these mature Stoke on Trent renters should start saving thousands of pounds a
year now to be able to afford their rent in retirement. However, in many circumstances, the reason
these people are privately renting in the first place is that they were never
able to find the money for a mortgage deposit on their home in the first place,
or didn’t earn enough to qualify for a mortgage …and now as they approach
retirement with hope of a nice council bungalow, that hope is diminishing because
of the council house sell off in the 1980’s!
For a
change, the Stoke on Trent 30 to 40 somethings will be better off, as their
parents are more likely to be homeowners and cascade their equity down the line
when their parents pass away. For
example, that is what is happening in Europe where renting is common, the
majority of people rent in their 20’s, 30’s and 40’s, but by the time they hit
50’s and 60’s (and retirement), they will invest the money they have inherited
from their parents passing away and buy their own home.
So, what does
this all mean for buy to let landlords in Stoke on Trent?
Have you noticed how the new
homes builders don’t build bungalows anymore ... in fact some would said the
‘bungalow storey’ is over. The waning in the number of bungalows being built has more to do
with supply than demand. The fact is
that for new homes builders there is more money in constructing houses than
there is in constructing bungalows. Bungalows are voracious when it comes to land
they need as because bungalow has a larger footprint for the same amount of
square meterage as a two/three storey house due to the fact they are on one
level instead of two or three.That means, as demand will continue to rise for bungalows supply will remain the same. We all know what happens when demand outs strips supply … prices (i.e. rents) for bungalows will inevitably go up.
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