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Letting signs are seen outside properties in Maida Vale on October 26, 2020 in London, England
A survey by Shelter found 22% of tenants in England are worried about losing their home at short notice. Photograph: Peter Summers/Getty Images
A survey by Shelter found 22% of tenants in England are worried about losing their home at short notice. Photograph: Peter Summers/Getty Images

Tenants in England fear losing homes after eviction ban ends, says Shelter

This article is more than 2 years old

Bailiff-enforced evictions in private sector allowed from 1 June after Covid-related suspension

Many private tenants across England are worried about losing their home, according to Shelter, after a ban on bailiff-enforced rental sector evictions in England ends on 31 May.

A survey by Shelter found 22% of tenants in England are worried they will be asked to leave their current home at short notice.

Four in 10 said their experience of finding and trying to keep a home makes them worry about finding another home in the future.

Polly Neate, the chief executive of Shelter, said: “The lifting of the eviction ban signals the beginning of the end for many renters facing homelessness. Thousands of people will wake up on 1 June knowing they’ll soon be kicked out of their home, with nowhere to go.

“The ban has been a lifeline for private renters who have weathered job losses, falling incomes and rising debts in this pandemic. But what happens now? Longer notice periods, while they last, will give some worried renters valuable time. But come September, anyone facing eviction will have just weeks to find somewhere else to live.”

Nearly 2,000 private tenants in England were surveyed.

The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government has previously said that renters will continue to be supported as national Covid-19 restrictions in England ease.

As part of a phased approach, notice periods – which were previously extended to six months as an emergency measure during the pandemic – will be set at four months from 1 June.

The StepChange debt charity’s chief executive, Phil Andrew, said: “Support from government, like furlough and benefit uplifts, has been important in helping people through the pandemic, but not sufficient to keep many renters out of arrears.

“There are clear gaps in support, which have seen a £360m black hole of rent debt build up over the course of the pandemic. The government can help by creating an emergency package of grants and no-interest loans to help rescue those in rent arrears due to Covid. It will help keep people in their homes, avert mounting problem debt, housing insecurity and homelessness and will enable people to get back on their feet after a devastating year.”

More on this story

More on this story

  • Help struggling tenants weather end of Covid eviction ban, urges poverty charity

  • Private renters in England on ‘cliff edge’ as eviction ban ends

  • Staycation boom forces tenants out of seaside resort homes

  • Rent arrears put thousands at risk as end of eviction ban in England looms

  • About 700,000 renters served with ‘no-fault’ eviction notices since start of pandemic

  • Eviction orders being issued despite UK government Covid pledge

  • Chancellor urged to use budget to tackle rent debt crisis

  • Ban on bailiff-enforced evictions in England extended to end of March

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