close
close

Landlords hit with £923 charge as Lambeth Council tackles poor quality homes

Landlords will be forced to buy a £923 license to rent out properties in certain areas of Lambeth under a council plan to tackle poor quality homes and reduce anti-social behaviour. People renting a single property to fewer than three households in Knight’s Hill, Streatham Common and Vale, Streatham Hill East and Streatham St Leonard’s will need to buy a license from September.

The four areas of Lambeth were chosen to launch the scheme because properties in these wards have almost double the national average of serious hazards. Around 8,600 properties across the four wards are expected to come under the new selective licensing regime, which will run for five years until 2029.




The Labour-led council plans to outline plans to extend the scheme to a wider area of ​​the borough in the autumn. Under the proposals, the scheme would be extended to all boroughs in the borough except Vauxhall and Waterloo and South Bank.

READ MORE: 156 names and contact details published on South London Council website in data breach

The first stage of the new landlord licensing scheme has been approved by Lambeth Council(Image: LDR Grainne Cuffe)

National legislation only allows councils to introduce licensing schemes in areas where there is sufficient evidence of poor housing. The council failed to find enough evidence of poor quality housing in Vauxhall and Waterloo and the South Bank to support the introduction of the scheme there.

Landlords with properties with an energy performance rating of C or above will receive a £50 discount on the proposed license cost of £923. Those who are part of an accredited homeowners association will receive a £75 discount. Landlords who own more than one apartment in a block will also receive a discount.

The first stage of the scheme covering Knight’s Hill, Streatham Common and Vale, Streatham Hill East and Streatham St Leonard’s was approved at a Lambeth Council cabinet meeting last Thursday (May 16).

Around a third of Lambeth’s 144,985 homes are privately rented and government and council figures suggest 9,446 of these could be at serious risk. Officials believe around 39,851 properties in the borough could be included in the new selective licensing regime.

Related Articles

Back to top button