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Buy to let: why landlords should buy in the north

Cliff D'Arcy
by Lovemoney Staff Cliff D'Arcy on 25 April 2012  |  Comments 5 comments

Buy-to-let investors should head north for the best rental returns, but avoid the midlands!

Buy to let: why landlords should buy in the north

Property investors looking for the highest rental returns should head for the north, while avoiding London, the midlands and Scotland.

At least, that's the conclusion drawn from a new survey of rental yields conducted by Paragon Group, a leading specialist provider of buy-to-let mortgages.

North by North West

Paragon has been lending to professional and small-scale landlords since 1995, so it's fair to say it is something of an expert on buy-to-let property investing.

In its latest survey of UK rental yields (the returns landlords make from rental income), Paragon found that landlords in the north west currently earn the highest average yields. Here, the average rental yield was 6.6% in the first quarter, up from 5.9% in the fourth quarter of 2011.

The north east offered the second-highest yields to landlords in the first quarter of this year, averaging 6.5%. In third place was the south west (6.4%), followed by the east of England (6.3%).

A property's yield is defined as its yearly rental income divided by its current value, expressed as a percentage. Yields are a vital indicator for landlords looking to expand their portfolios.

Across the UK as a whole, Paragon found that the average yield for landlords was 6.2% in the first three months of this year. This UK-wide average has risen from 5.9% in the final three months of 2011, showing that higher rents are boosting landlords' returns.

Where yields are highest

Paragon found seven regions where rental yields were above or equal to the UK average of 5.9%. Here they are:

Region

Average

yield

North west

6.6%

North east

6.5%

South west

6.4%

East of England

6.3%

South east (excl. London)

6.1%

Wales

6.0%

Central London

5.9%

Outside of the four regions I mentioned earlier, the other areas with above-average rental yields were the South East, Wales and Central London. While property prices are high in these two southern regions, so too are average rents, thus producing rental yields above the UK norm.

Where yields are below-average

Paragon also identified these five regions where rental yields were below the UK average of 5.9%:

Region

Average

yield

Greater London

5.7%

Yorkshire and the Humber

5.7%

West midlands

5.5%

East midlands

5.5%

Scotland

5.5%

As you can see, yields in Greater London match those in Yorkshire and the Humber, with both at 5.7%. Yields in the West and East Midlands and Scotland were the lowest in Britain, as all three regions have an average rental yield of 5.5% a year.

Don't forget price changes

Of course, Paragon's survey looks at only one side of the buy-to-let coin: the income generated by renting property to tenants. What it doesn't analyse are the returns made by landlords from rising (or falling) house prices.

During the UK's great property boom of 1995 to 2007, house prices rose for 12 years straight, with prices more than tripling in some areas. However, when the credit crunch arrived in August 2007, house prices started tumbling across the UK and didn't stabilise until the spring of 2009.

Furthermore, house prices continue to slide in many parts of the UK, but have bounced back strongly in Central London. Here's how sale prices have changed over the past 12 months, based on the latest Halifax House Price Index:

Region

Change

East Anglia

7.6%

Greater London

3.6%

East midlands

2.0%

Yorkshire and the Humber

1.7%

South west

1.4%

North

0.4%

West midlands

0.2%

South east

0.1%

North west

-0.5%

UK

-0.6%

Wales

-2.9%

Scotland

-10.1%

Northern Ireland

-11.7%

Source: Halifax HPI, quarterly regional data, not seasonally adjusted

As you can see, the average price of a property in East Anglia has surged 7.6% since March 2011, producing the strongest capital gains for landlords. Greater London prices rose by 3.6%m while prices crept up 2% in the east midlands.

Three regions underperformed the UK average of -0.6% over the past 12 months. These were Wales (down 2.9%), Scotland (-10.1%) and struggling Northern Ireland, which crashed 11.7%.

When scouting for rental properties, landlords must take account of both local rental yields and price trends. Otherwise, what they gain in higher yields, they could lose in falling prices!

More on property:

Why living near the Tube will cost an extra £27k

How are mortgage rates decided?

Five reasons why you need to remortgage today

Property asking prices hit record high - in the south

Ask these questions before you rent!

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Comments (5)

  • eLJay
    Love rating 76
    eLJay said

    By the time you factor in traveling to visit your properties and/or paying an agency to handle said property any profit on the measly percentage difference will have been totally removed or you may be even worse off. Do you not think that people in the North do not realise this? I know of a number of investors up there who buy property to rent out, if your reading this your already behind the game and risk not finding anyone to rent it, yes folks there are few jobs there and therefore nobody to pay the rents you are after anyway.

    Report on 25 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • marghurl
    Love rating 6
    marghurl said

    I am totally fed-up reading these articles of southern landlords being advised to move up t'north and grab a bargain. Our own people desperately need housing and can do without these get-rich-types hyping up rents and then being absentee landlords into the bargain. Stay down south and leave the North alone.

    Report on 26 April 2012  |  Love thisLove  4 loves
  • LiamT
    Love rating 45
    LiamT said

    well said marghurl. enough of these landlords who are price fixing their rent. £600/mth to rent 3 bedroom terraces is a disgrace. stop ripping off the poor who cannot get mortgages. im so lucky i managed to get on the ladder 12 years ago. im paying less mortgage for a 4 bed detatched village house than many of my mates are paying for a terrace. this is simple profiteering and should not be encouraged. no wonder the poor are getting so disillusioned with life.

    Report on 01 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  1 love
  • Max878
    Love rating 37
    Max878 said

    People in this area of England (Cumbrian border) are leaving because there's hardly any work and they can't find anywhere to live. Now Southern (absentee) landlords are deciding that they want to cash-in.

    Clear off. You're not helping.

    Report on 06 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  2 loves
  • nickpike
    Love rating 270
    nickpike said

    You shouldn't be promoting BTL, and property as investment. You should be promoting price falls, so people can afford to buy.

    We have low interest rates at present so loans are cheap. This is credit crunch 2 fermenting. When rates go back up, it will wipe out a lot of these landlords. If financing BTL with a mortgage, I don't think the figures stack-up. This model depended on prices going up all the time. Fortunately, price are now falling.

    BTW, the latest Halifax prices are back to 2004 levels, so prices have not gone up for the last 8 years. Lets hope this reduction in prices continue. High prices are screwing the economy.

    Report on 06 May 2012  |  Love thisLove  0 loves

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