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News Article

"In May, you MUST give your Tenants the Renters Rights Information Sheet or

YOU RISK  - £7,000 FINE  PER TENANT PER PROPERTY."READ MORE

Landlords May Face Paying Double Council Tax During Void Periods

17th Feb 2023

Landlords are saying housing standards in Manchester could suffer because of council tax changes for empty homes being brought in.

Image credit: Pexels

The Labour-controlled council has just closed its formal consultation on its proposal to increase the level of council tax for empty homes by 100 per cent.

Manchester City Council also intends to increase council tax by 4.99 per cent next financial year, with an average Band D property tax rising to £1,966 per year.

If as expected the new levy for empty properties is agreed upon then landlords with a Band D property will have an extra bill of £327.66 per month during a void period.

A PRS trade body has sent its objections to the consultation explaining that in the majority of locations, empty properties on the whole are only subject to extra council tax during void periods when it is more than two years.

It says doubling the council tax for landlords in the current hard economic climate will unfairly punish landlords during void periods and the extra cost may have to be paid by higher rents for future tenants.

The trade body says landlords do not ‘appreciate’ void periods which naturally happen between tenancies for short periods, however some landlords take the ‘opportunity’ to upgrade energy efficiency measures and other property improvements.

The trade body, says: “By penalising PRS landlords for making improvements the city council risks them carrying out only absolutely essential works, encouraging them to ditch plans for other improvements if they know they will face a financial penalty for doing so.”

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"In May, you MUST give your Tenants the Renters Rights Information Sheet or

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Fit for Habitation|March 2019 The ACT is intended to define minimum standards a rental property MUST be and makes a clearer pathway way for Tenants to be compensated|https://www.pims.co.uk/fit_for_habitation_act_march_2019/ Guarantor|The person who provides a guarantee and promises to make payment good should the person responsible for the agreement fail|http://www.pims.co.uk/guarantors/ MEES|The Minimum Energy Efficiency Standard (MEES) Landlords are charged with the requirement to bring their rental property to a minimum EPC rating of E. Property with F and G rating will effectively be banned from the rental market April 2018 |http://www.pims.co.uk/epc/ Section 11|Section 11 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985 places an obligation on the landlord to maintain the structure and exterior of the property, including installations for the supply of water, gas and electricity, heating systems, drainage and sanitary appliances|http://www.pims.co.uk/landlord-section-11-repairs/ serving date|This date is the date deemed received at the property - as an example if posted allow for posting days|/serving-notice-on-a-tenant-delivery-days/ Tenancy Application|The objective of vetting is to empower yourself so you can make an informed decision as to the calibre of the prospective person. Making your decision on facts and figures is invaluable and this is why you should always take references. The application form also provides you with permission to perform credits. This form details all the information you should ever require deal with most eventualities including absconding tenants|http://www.pims.co.uk/doc/57/ Tenant Fees|From June 2019 where renting properties in England gone are the days of charging for admin, letting fees, vetting, references, inventory, check in, check out, cleaning, pet insurance or ANY other fee that is not explicitly permitted within the legislation. |https://www.pims.co.uk/ban_letting_fees_act_2019/