November 2025 - Budget Disappointment and Renter Reform Thoughts
Chris Hunter • December 5, 2025

Renters Reform is locked in – so what now? November brings the reality of these changes into sharper focus, alongside the usual Budget considerations. If you're a landlord, especially one who's not doing this full-time, it's time to get to grips with what it all means. Is the government making life harder for landlords? Maybe. But the real question is: how do you adapt and thrive in this new landscape?


Budget 2025: Key Property Updates from Government Sources


1. High Value Council Tax Surcharge

The government is introducing a new High Value Council Tax Surcharge for residential properties worth over £2 million in England, starting April 2028. The charges will be:

  • £2,500 per year for properties worth £2-5 million
  • £7,500 per year for properties worth over £5 million

This affects fewer than 1% of properties and will be paid by property owners rather than occupiers 


2. Property Income Tax Changes

From April 2027, the government will create separate tax rates for property income:

  • Property basic rate: 22%
  • Property higher rate: 42%
  • Property additional rate: 47%

This applies to England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The government will engage with devolved governments of Scotland and Wales regarding setting their own property income rates 


3. Business Rates Reform

The government is introducing permanently lower business rates for retail, hospitality and leisure properties with rateable values below £500,000:

  • Small business RHL multiplier: 38.2p (down from 49.9p)
  • Standard RHL multiplier: 43p (down from 55.5p)

This is funded by a higher rate for properties worth £500,000+, set at 50.8p 


4. Housing Investment

The government is committing to deliver 1.5 million homes in England this Parliament, backed by:

  • £39 billion Social and Affordable Homes Programme over 10 years
  • £16 billion National Housing Bank
  • At least three new towns with 10,000+ homes each

The National Housing Bank will be headquartered in Leeds as part of a financial services cluster 


5. Inheritance Tax Changes

The government will maintain the nil-rate band and residence nil-rate band at current levels for a further year until April 2031. The £1 million allowance for 100% rate of agricultural and business property relief will also be transferable between spouses and civil partners 


6. Planning Reforms

The government is implementing the most ambitious planning reforms in a generation through the Planning and Infrastructure Bill, which aims to:

  • Speed up major infrastructure delivery by up to 12 months
  • Enable "default yes" to development around train stations
  • Add 170,000 homes through reformed planning rules

The OBR estimates these reforms will add £6.8 billion to the economy 




Renters' Rights Act


Phase 1: 1 May 2026


The core reforms will take effect, including:

Abolition of Section 21 'No Fault' Evictions

  • Landlords can no longer evict tenants without a specific reason
  • End to the practice that has pushed thousands into homelessness
  • All assured tenancies become periodic (rolling contracts)

New Tenancy Structure

  • All new and existing tenancies become Assured Periodic Tenancies
  • Tenants can stay as long as they want (until valid grounds for eviction)
  • Tenants can end tenancy with two months' notice

Reformed Possession Grounds

  • Landlords can only evict with valid reasons such as:
  • Selling the property
  • Moving in themselves or close family member
  • Tenant rent arrears or anti-social behaviour
  • Extended grounds for serious persistent rent arrears and anti-social behaviour

Rent Controls

  • Rent increases limited to once per year
  • Landlords must give at least 2 months' notice of increases
  • Tenants can challenge excessive above-market rents designed to force them out

Ban on Rental Bidding and Advance Payments

  • Illegal to ask for or accept offers above advertised rent
  • Cannot request more than 1 month's rent in advance

Anti-Discrimination Measures

  • Illegal to discriminate against tenants with children or on benefits
  • Must base decisions only on financial suitability

Pet Rights

  • Tenants have right to request pets
  • Landlords must consider requests and cannot unreasonably refuse
  • Initial 28-day consideration period for landlords

Strengthened Enforcement

  • Enhanced local council powers and civil penalties
  • Rent repayment orders extended to superior landlords
  • Maximum penalties doubled for repeat offenders 


Phase 2: From Late 2026


Private Rented Sector Database

  • Mandatory registration for all PRS landlords from late 2026
  • Annual fee required (amount to be confirmed)
  • Must provide:
  • Landlord contact details
  • Property details (address, type, bedrooms, occupancy)
  • Safety information (Gas, Electric, Energy Performance Certificates)

Private Rented Sector Landlord Ombudsman

  • Mandatory scheme for all landlords (expected 2028)
  • Binding dispute resolution service
  • Powers to compel landlords to:
  • Issue apologies
  • Provide information
  • Take remedial action
  • Pay compensation 


Phase 3: Dates TBC (Subject to Consultation)


Decent Homes Standard

  • Applied to PRS for first time
  • Properties must be safe, well-maintained and free from serious hazards
  • Consultation proposed implementation for either 2035 or 2037

Awaab's Law Extension

  • Clear legal timeframes for landlords to address serious hazards
  • Particularly focuses on damp and mould issues
  • Empowers tenants to challenge dangerous conditions

Energy Efficiency Standards

  • Consultation on requiring all PRS properties to meet EPC C or equivalent by 2030 



November Newsletter - Budget Disappointment & Renter Reform Thoughts


Well, the UK budget arrived, and... it was a bit of a letdown, wasn't it? Not much in there to really grab your attention. It feels like the government's nudging everyone to get their money working harder through investments, rather than letting it sit in a bank.


And that's a point we've been making for ages! While everyone's been waiting and watching, those who've already invested with us have been reaping the rewards.


On the Renters Reform Bill, we reckon about 90% of it is just good, common sense – stuff we're already doing as standard (and often going above and beyond). As for the other 10%, we're waiting for the full picture to emerge before we make a judgement.

The bottom line? If you're in property to make money, it's a business. Treat it that way, and you'll see the difference.



This blog post was written by Chris and Anthony Hunter, founders of Chant Properties Ltd. The information provided is based on market data available as of November 2025 and represents our current understanding of the property market. Always seek professional advice before making investment decisions.


Please fact-check all information before publishing, particularly the statistics, dates, and specific details about policy changes.



By Chris Hunter July 3, 2026
The headline from Rightmove landed mid-June and it looked bad. Average UK asking prices dropped 0.6% - the biggest June fall in fourteen years.  If you read that and thought "the property market's going backwards," I'd completely understand it. Most people did. But that number - £376,191 as the new average UK asking price - is doing a lot of heavy lifting for a very divided market. And what it's hiding is arguably more interesting than what it's showing. Here's what actually happened in June 2026, source by source. What Rightmove's June Data Actually Tells You The 0.6% monthly fall (down £2,113 from May) took the average UK asking price to £376,191. Year-on-year, prices are down 0.5%. Stock on the market is at a historically high level for this time of year. Buyer demand is down 10% year-on-year. Over a third of new listings are failing to sell. That sounds rough. And in some parts of the country, it is. But those figures are a national average, and a national average in 2026 is almost meaningless. The South is pulling the number down. Southern England and Wales saw price falls across every region. London dropped 1.2% year-on-year. The South East was down 1.6%. Meanwhile, the North East was up 3.2% year-on-year, with an average asking price of £200,887. Month-on-month movement: zero. Flat. Stable. Scotland was up 0.8% month-on-month and 3.3% year-on-year. Rightmove's own analysis notes that none of the ten fastest-growing cities over the last decade are in southern England - and Manchester's asking prices have risen 63% since 2016, compared with London's 7%. Zoopla and the ONS: What Sold Prices Say Rightmove tracks asking prices - what sellers want. Zoopla and the ONS track agreed sales and sold prices - what buyers actually pay. The gap between those two things matters. Zoopla's June 2026 House Price Index puts UK house price growth at 1.4% year-on-year, supported by easing mortgage rates and resilient demand in several regions. Not spectacular. But growth, not decline. The ONS official UK House Price Index - based on completed Land Registry transactions - shows average UK house prices increased 3.8% in the 12 months to April 2026, to £270,000. England averaged £291,000 (up 3.9%), Wales £212,000 (up 3.5%), Scotland £192,000 (up 2.8%). That 3.8% figure looks very different from Rightmove's falling asking prices. The explanation is partly timing - the ONS data lags by a couple of months - and partly the "base effect" from Stamp Duty Land Tax changes in April 2025, which distorted the year-on-year comparisons. The ONS flags this explicitly. For the North East specifically: the ONS data for Newcastle upon Tyne shows an average house price of £209,000 in April 2026 - up 5.0% from April 2025. The wider North East region saw average prices of £163,000, up 9.9% year-on-year in that same period. The Rental Market The ONS Price Index of Private Rents shows average UK monthly private rents increased 3.3% to £1,383 in the 12 months to May 2026. England averaged £1,442 (up 3.4%). Within England, the North East recorded the highest annual rent inflation of any English region at 5.9%. London, which averages £2,294 per month, saw the lowest growth at 2.0%. Newcastle upon Tyne sits well above the regional average. ONS local data shows average monthly rents in the city reached £1,204 in May 2026 - up 10.3% from £1,092 the previous year. The North East regional average stands at £776, up from £733 a year earlier. Zoopla's June 2026 Rental Market Report adds wider context: there are 25% fewer homes available to rent than pre-pandemic levels nationally. Rental inflation of 2.1% at the national headline level understates conditions on the ground - three-quarters of rental areas are growing faster than that average. Mortgages and the Base Rate The Bank of England held the base rate at 3.75% on 18th June 2026 - the fourth consecutive hold. The Monetary Policy Committee voted 7–2 in favour of holding, with inflation at 2.8% in May still above the 2% target. The next MPC meeting is 30th July. Fixed mortgage rates have moved independently of the base rate decision. Rightmove's daily tracker recorded the average two-year fixed rate at 5.07%, down from 5.18% the previous month - a saving of around £30 a month on a typical mortgage. Several lenders also cut buy-to-let rates by up to 20 basis points during June. As of 2nd July, financial markets expected the base rate to hold at 3.75% for the remainder of 2026. A Note From Us We've been buying property in Newcastle and across the North East since 2009, with a portfolio now worth over £2.5 million. We publish this monthly update because we think the data is worth reading properly - regional context tends to get lost in national headlines, and June 2026 is a good example of why that matters. Sources: Rightmove House Price Index June 2026 | Zoopla House Price Index June 2026 | ONS Private Rent and House Prices UK: June 2026 | ONS Housing Prices in Newcastle upon Tyne | Bank of England Base Rate - held 18 June 2026 | HM Land Registry UK HPI April 2026
By Chris Hunter June 5, 2026
The UK Property Market in May 2026: What the Numbers Are Really Telling Us
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