Landlord Exodus Slows Down
As of April 2026, the proportion of landlords selling off their former rental properties has nearly halved in the past year, indicating a slowdown in the wave of buy-to-let exits that has marked the private rented sector in recent years. This is according to the latest Property & Homemover Report from TwentyCi. The percentage of homes coming to market that were previously rented dropped from 22.5% in Q1 2025 to 12.4% in Q1 2026, representing a year-on-year reduction of 45%. This decline was observed across the UK, with London recording the most significant fall of 51%.
Of the properties sold in Q2 and Q3 2025, only 6% outside London were subsequently re-let, rising to 11% in the capital. This suggests that most are likely being absorbed by owner-occupiers rather than other investors.
Broader Housing Market Stability
The broader housing market has made a relatively stable start to 2026. New listings have increased by 5.1% year-on-year. Transactions were down 3.9% compared with last year but up 10.7% on Q1 2023 and 19.2% on Q1 2024, once the distorting effect of last year’s stamp duty deadline is taken into account. Colin Bradshaw, chief executive of TwentyCi, stated that the market was ‘continuing to tick along nicely’ despite global disruption. However, he noted some initial cooling in London and the South East as fixed mortgage rates have moved back above 5%.
Buyer enquiries fell sharply in March, mortgage pricing has become more volatile, and inflation concerns are prompting the Bank of England to hold rates rather than cut. The report expects transactions in 2026 to be broadly similar to 2025 – around 1.2 million – but said the outlook depends on whether geopolitical pressures have a wider economic impact.
Lettings Market Overview
In the lettings market, the number of rental properties coming to market rose by nearly 19% year-on-year, while lets agreed increased by 5.8%. Average rents edged down 2% to £1,450 per month but remain close to record highs, with affordability still a significant constraint for tenants.
