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A street lined with houses in Leeds
Leeds is one of the cities in England where the biggest loss of social housing has occurred. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer
Leeds is one of the cities in England where the biggest loss of social housing has occurred. Photograph: Gary Calton/The Observer

Social rent homes in England fall by more than quarter of a million in decade

This article is more than 2 months old

Charities have called on all political parties to address the ‘shameful record’ on social housing and build more homes

More than a quarter of a million social rent homes in England have been lost in the last decade, according to analysis of government statistics.

Between April 2013 and April 2023, the number of social housing homes owned by local authorities and housing associations in England fell by 260,464 units, according to the charity Shelter, which calculated the figures.

Polly Neate, its chief executive, said: “We are seeing more social housing being sold off or demolished than built, despite the staggering 1.3m households stuck on social housing waiting lists in desperate need of a genuinely affordable home.

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said that 1.3m households were stuck on social housing waiting lists. Photograph: Martin Godwin/The Observer

“Without enough social housing, every other area in the system bottlenecks. As a result, the country is hitting one shameful record after the next, with 145,800 children homeless in temporary accommodation – the highest number ever – private rents at record highs and rising evictions.”

The fall in England’s social housing stock has been driven by a combination of property demolitions, the right to buy scheme that allowed council tenants to buy their homes, and housing providers converting social rent accommodation into markedly more expensive “affordable rent” housing.

The number of social rent homes lost in these ways exceeds additions to the social housing stock in the form of new-builds and acquisitions.

There was a net loss of 11,684 social rent homes in 2022-23, the most recent year for which figures have been published. Some of the biggest losses have occurred in Birmingham, Leicester, Barnet and Leeds.

Neate called on all parties to address the issue: “Political parties of all stripes must commit to building genuinely affordable social homes – 90,000 a year over 10 years is the only way to end the housing emergency for good.”

Claire Holland, housing spokesperson for the Local Government Association, said: “Councils can play a critical role in solving this country’s housing crisis if they are given the powers and resources to build more of the genuinely affordable homes our communities desperately need.

“Our white paper sets out a range of proposals for whoever forms the next government to boost housing supply. This includes granting five-year local housing deals, which combines national funding, for all areas of the country that want them.

“This will provide certainty and efficiencies and could support delivery of an additional 200,000 social homes in a 30-year period.”

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Shelter also found that private rents in England are on average £828 a month higher than social rents.

Karly, a mother of three from Bideford in Devon, was made homeless in December 2020 because of a relationship breakdown. After two months in temporary accommodation, she was able to move into social rented housing, for which she pays £470 a month rent. “People on the same road who rent privately are paying anywhere between £850 and £1,100,” she said. “They’re the same council houses, but they were bought [under right to buy], so they’re now privately owned.”

A Conservative party spokesperson said: “Thanks to our clear plan and bold action we have delivered 1m homes this parliament and almost 700,000 more affordable homes since 2010.”

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Sadiq Khan pledges to eliminate rough sleeping in London ‘once and for all’

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