The General Public Want Tenant Fees Banned

By 2 min read • May 10, 2017

Letting agents charge tenants and landlords fees for drawing up tenancy agreements to carrying out credit checks and taking payments.

Most people agree that some fees are appropriate, given that a letting agent does perform some duties, but a recent survey carried out by the Citizens Advice Bureau has found that the general public as a whole believes tenant fees should be banned and tenants should only pay a small, nominal fee if they want to rent a property.

*****Whoops! Looks like this is an old post that isn’t relevant any more :/ *****

*****Visit the blog home page for the most up to date news. *****

Tenants pay, on average, £337 per person, yet ARLA believes a fee of £200 per person is a more realistic figure. In some cases, letting agents charge tenants and landlords for the same checks, so they earn the same amount, twice.

CAB Survey

The CAB survey found that 46% of people thought tenants should not pay anything other than one month’s rent in advance, plus a reasonable deposit. 61% also thought tenants should pay no more than £50 to rent a property.

Landlords Charged Hefty Fees

The truth is that it is hard to defend a system whereby tenants are charged several hundred pounds to rent a property. Often, charges are opaque and tenants don’t have a clue what the “admin fee” actually covers. Landlords are also charged hefty fees by some letting agents.

There is evidence to suggest that many tenants are approaching private landlords directly in order to save money. Social media makes it easy to find landlords and vacant properties, which is good news for landlords.

Was this post useful?
0/600
Awesome!
Thanks so much for your feedback!
Got it!
Thanks for your feedback.
Share with friends:
Copied
Popular articles

Get the best of Landlord Insider
delivered to your inbox fortnightly

Sign up and we’ll send you our latest posts, tax tips, legal tips, software tips and compliance deadlines, everything you need to know every two weeks. Unsubscribe any time.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.