In 2018, landlords with single properties represented 69% of landlords alright. At that point, just under 3% of landlords owned 10 or more properties, with a third of them having more than 100 properties on their books. I'd be interested is seeing how that has evolved since then with more commercial investment.Bit players control >90% of the rental stock though.
100% outside urban areas!
Do you own your home? Or are you renting long term?rental market isn't really the horror show
How do you think my experience is representative of the entire population?Do you own your home? Or are you renting long term?
I was too conservative. RTB says that "Larger landlords associated with 10 or more tenancies, manage roughly 20% of all private tenancy stock registered with the RTB." So it's more like 80% of properties controlled by bit players.In 2018, landlords with single properties represented 69% of landlords alright. At that point, just under 3% of landlords owned 10 or more properties, with a third of them having more than 100 properties on their books. I'd be interested is seeing how that has evolved since then with more commercial investment.
I am all for professionalisation. My best landlord ever was an Irish developer who held on to a whole apartment complex built in the 90s.If the numbers living in rented homes continues to increase, and 5% of landlords are exiting the market every year, surely it follows that more and more are being run by landlords who are in it commercially rather than by accident.
How do you think my experience is representative of the entire population?
@Leo How do you think my experience is representative of the entire population?
I don't think it's fair to categorise small landlords in this way; without them there would be even less rental properties on the market.So it's more like 80% of properties controlled by bit players
Not my use of the term!I don't think it's fair to categorise small landlords in this way;
Because your question has no relevance. The above just confirms your views are based on assumptions!Why do you answer a question with a question?
I find it interesting that those who expound the view that long term renting is perfectly fine; are not, from what I can see, renting long-term themselves.
views are based on assumptions
What a great idea Thirsty! I also nailed my colours to the home owning mast. I encourage transparency as there's smoke and mirrors with the pro-renting argument on the thread.I've proposed that everyone posting here says clearly if they are a homeowner or if they are renting long term.
And it is very relevant, putting your money where your mouth is so to speak.
So far as I can see (but this is a very long thread & I may have missed some); only @Purple and myself have said what our housing status is - would you like to add yours @Leo?
Thirsty (home owner!)
The evidence in the market, especially Dublin, would say you are wrong. The big players have set new levels for higher rents and are deliberately keeping properties vacant to underpin those higher rentsI'd like to see more bigger players in the rental market. I think they are better for tenants.
I wonder is that a distortion caused by government rent limits.The evidence in the market, especially Dublin, would say you are wrong. The big players have set new levels for higher rents and are deliberately keeping properties vacant to underpin those higher rents
Higher rents are a reflection of supply and demand and vacant units are a reflection of bad regulation of the market. None of that is the fault of large scale landlords.The evidence in the market, especially Dublin, would say you are wrong. The big players have set new levels for higher rents and are deliberately keeping properties vacant to underpin those higher rents
The First-Time Buyer’ is a myth that needs to be put into perspective as the ultimate tiny tail that is wagging a very big dog. There are about two million houses and apartments in Ireland. Out of about 24,000 annual house purchases, only around 6,000 are first-time buyers.
This means that national policy is driven by the needs of one third of one percent of all homeowners, and one quarter of annual sales.
I agree that we need higher density housing but I think that the flaws and dysfunction within the process, from land purchase to housing completion, are a bigger issue. There is nothing driving efficiency within the system, any part of the system, as it's a sellers market.We need to make the pie bigger, not argue over who gets a bigger slice of the same size pie
Moving dwellings from rented dwellings to owner-occupied dwellings, or vice versa, does absolutely nothing to fix the housing crisis - we need to put in place policies that ensure more dwellings are built - full stop.
If this means higher densities in locations where people want to live, then so be it and we should ensure that the planning system makes available the roads, schools, shops, parks, etc that are necessary
But not all bit-players are bad. What incentive is there for landlords with 10 or fewer properties to keep flipping tenancies on a regular basis, particularly in RPZ areas which account for the majority of tenancies?I was too conservative. RTB says that "Larger landlords associated with 10 or more tenancies, manage roughly 20% of all private tenancy stock registered with the RTB." So it's more like 80% of properties controlled by bit players.
I'd agree with the rate being slower than what might be ideal. but recent legislation is certainly moving the needle. I believe the recent government move to block the mass purchase of developments is purely window dressing to appease the rabble. Otherwise why add restrictions so that it would only apply to developments after they had been advertised for sale while also talking about referring it to to the AG on fears such measures might be unconstitutional?I just don't think that professionals are replacing small-time landlords fast enough though. At the moment you have a perfect storm of tax and regulation forcing the small guy out, and a government that doesn't want the funds buying up new developments.
So for the time being your average renter is stuck with an amateur landlord who has a pretty high probability of leaving at any stage.
I've spent many years renting and as an owner. My views are coloured by my experiences in both, but I understand I'm just one person, so my experiences are not representative of a national issue.So far as I can see (but this is a very long thread & I may have missed some); only @Purple and myself have said what our housing status is - would you like to add yours @Leo?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?