Two UK-based short-term accommodation brands are joining forces: UnderTheDoorMat Group and Veeve are merging in a share exchange.
28.11.2023 - 13:24 / skift.com / Srividya Kalyanaraman
The UK Short-Term Accommodation Association (UKSTAA) conducted new research that identified nearly 2 million homes that local authorities consider “deliverable,” with as many as 1.5 million of them in the next five years.
Its methodology involved analyzing 294 Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessments, a study which every local authority is required to undertake to give an overview of the potential development sites within its boundary, as well as the government’s Housing and Economic Land Availability Assessments.
These city councils are required to regularly demonstrate how they plan to meet local housing needs over the coming five years and beyond.
The research suggests that the 2 million homes would represent a 6% increase in the current housing stock.
The association identified 10 city councils including Birmingham, Leeds, Manchester, Cornwall among others with the largest pipeline of homes, which could deliver over 200,000 homes. The London councils have identified an additional 330,000 new homes.
Permitted Housing Supply In City Councils
The association is championing the benefits of tourism (and to get the regulators off its back) arguing that restricting rentals won’t help the local economy. While short-term rentals do have a part to play in rising rents, the association claims that the housing shortage issue isn’t a rental issue.
“We’re in a situation where the planning system in the UK is under massive strain,” Andy Fenner, CEO of UKSTAA told Skift. “But the blame for this lack of housing is being placed on us. Yes, we do use houses, our industry is about home sharing, and we are contributing slightly to the housing crisis, we know that. But every single building in the built environment could be a house, every closed down shop, every factory, every office could be a house.”
Housing shortages are a global issue today. And different governments are tackling it in different ways: Canada is taking away tax benefits from short-term rental platforms, Airbnb hosts in Western Australia are getting paid AUD $10,000 ($6600) to rent long term to ease housing shortage.
But for the UK, the problem has persisted for decades.
London-based think tank Centre for Cities released a study earlier this year titled “The UK’s 4 million missing homes,” highlighting that Britain’s lack of housing construction is an historical problem. The research pointed out that Britain has built fewer homes than any other western European nation in the six decades through 2015.
But the issue it’s a bit more complex, let’s unpack it.
There’s the issue of mortgages. New mortgage rates have increased from 1.5% at the beginning of 2022 to 5.25% in August this year. According to official government estimates,
Two UK-based short-term accommodation brands are joining forces: UnderTheDoorMat Group and Veeve are merging in a share exchange.
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Happy Thanksgiving, folks! I know you’d rather carve a turkey than open your inbox, so we will keep this brief.
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