Real Estate

London rents drop for two consecutive quarters

Rents in London have dropped for the second consecutive quarter – fuelled by strong reductions in SW14 Mortlake (-9%), W8 Holland Park and NW5 Kentish Town (-7% respectively), analysis from SpareRoom shows.

Despite these reductions London rents are still up year-on-year by 1%.

Between Q2 2021 and Q2 2024 rents by just under a third (29%) across the UK from £576 in Q2 2021 to £740 in Q2 2024, as SpareRoom said it was good that the market is finally started to rebalance.

Matt Hutchinson, director at SpareRoom, said: “As supply has risen over the past couple of years and demand has fallen from the 2022 record peak, we’re starting to see the market slowly rebalance.

“However, although this is a welcome sign, the extent to which rents have risen in the past three years is shocking and there’s still a long, long way to go.

“The cost of living and chronic housing shortage will have been on voters’ minds last week.

“The new government is already making it clear that housing is on the agenda from day one, so hopefully the result will be a more coherent housing policy that focuses on building more homes and also making better use of existing ones.

“Despite average rents in London dropping for consecutive quarters, they’re still way beyond being affordable by any reasonable standard.”

UK rents as a whole were up 5% year-on-year in Q2, remaining at the same level as Q1 2024.

In terms of room rents, Kingston upon Thames (£898) are the most expensive, followed by Twickenham (£889) and Reigate (£845).

Warrington (15%) saw the biggest jump in rental prices, followed by Bolton (14%) and Southend on Sea (13%) over the past 12 months.




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