Does anyone know the position if a rent review has already been communicated to a tenant, fully as required, and supported by three other properties. Tenant lease due to expire end February 2017. New rent level more than 4% higher. In Dublin.
The real facts are of course that the rent rises are mostly all done and dusted by now so this will help nobody.
Does anyone know the position if a rent review has already been communicated to a tenant, fully as required, and supported by three other properties. Tenant lease due to expire end February 2017. New rent level more than 4% higher. In Dublin.
Well Sarenco as rents are coming down in Dublin the point is moot ! This was in reply to post beginning 'not true'
The government’s Strategy for the Rental Sector, while containing the welcome provision of rental restrictions is ultimately flawed because it does not link rent increases to inflation, excludes areas outside Dublin and Cork (particularly the commuter counties), does not provide security of tenure, proposes the sale of public land ‘below market value’ (i.e. give away/privatising a valuable public resource) to global real estate funds to increase ‘supply’, and is based on the failed (and contradictory) market assumptions that increasing rents will lead to further supply and increased supply will lead to affordable rents/house prices.
Firstly, in relation to the Strategy for the Rental Sector, there is no evidence or research provided by the government or the Department of Housing as to how the 4% increase in rents is being justified.
For example, 4% per annum represents 8 times the increase in annual earnings for full-time employees in 2015. It has no justification from price inflation as the (Consumer price index) is running at -0.3%. Within the CPI there is a specific category, Furnishings, Household Equipment & Routine Household Maintenance, which you would think would be a reasonable indicator as to the main on-going cost for landlords. Inflation for that category is running at -4.3%
Sadly, my tenants are about to get a nasty surprise in the mouth of Christmas.
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