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HomeBusinessEaling tenants experience steepest rise in London rent

Ealing tenants experience steepest rise in London rent


Harry Craig

BBC News, London

Getty Images A wide view of a row of multi-storey terraced houses along a street. The majority of the houses have white exteriors with black decor, although a few are pink or orange brick.  They all have sloped brown roofs. Each house has a driveway, with hedges separating each, and some have cars parked on the driveways. A pavement and road runs along in front of the houses, with a few cars parked on the roadside. Green leafy trees are regularly placed along the pavement. There is more greenery, including trees and bushes, visible behind the houses in their gardens. Another row of houses in a similar style are visible in the front left corner. Getty Images

The average London renter spends nearly 38% of their income on rent, according to the data

Philip James Lynch

Local Democracy Reporting Service

Private tenants in Ealing have faced the largest rent increases in London over the past five years, new figures suggest.

The rental index report by HomeLet suggested rents in the borough rose by about 52.5% between December 2019 and December 2024.

The average rent in Ealing is now £2,089 per calendar month, according to the analysis.

This was just above the London average of £2,071, and significantly more than the UK average of £1,284.

During 2024 alone, private rents in Ealing rose by 9.3%, the fourth-highest in London.

The data also suggested Londoners spent the highest proportion of their income on rent of any region in the UK at 37.9%, with the average being 32.6% – indicating the higher wages paid in the capital did not counter the increase in rent.

In response, Ealing Council said very few properties are affordable to residents, and warned that those on low-to-average incomes were being priced out.

Ealing has 7,500 applications on its housing register, with 200 to 250 new applications each month.

Many applicants have been placed hundreds of miles away from London by the council, with one family placed in Newcastle in March 2024.

A white sign with a grey rim on the right displays Transport for London's roundel, branded in the colours of the Elizabeth line. There is a hollow purple circle, with a dark blue box running horizontally across the middle containing writing reading 'West Ealing'. Behind the sign, a train platform is visible in the background. There is a yellow line running along the platform. A train is stationed at the platform, coloured in purple, black and white.

Ealing Council said improved transport links via the Elizabeth line were one of the factors in the rise

A spokesperson for Ealing Council attributed the steep increase to factors including a lack of supply as landlords leave the market.

“Ealing-specific factors” included an more new purpose-built private sector homes and improved transport connections.

The Elizabeth line opened in 2022 with two stations serving Ealing, and is now the busiest railway service in the UK.

The council said it cannot control private market rents, but uses regulatory powers to ensure good quality homes and tries to prevent the conversion of homes into houses of multiple occupation (HMOs).

Philip James Lynch A multi-storey brown brick building, viewed from the front. A row of glass doors are behind an overhanging balcony, with writing reading 'Ealing Council' displayed above the entrance. There are three flag poles above this, with the Union Flag flying from the middle pole. A set of stairs with handrails are in front of the entrance, and there is a grey information board to the right of the steps. On the far-right, a banner about cost of living support is partly visible. A small amount of green shrubbery is visible in the bottom right, to the right of the information board.Philip James Lynch

Ealing Council warn that all but the wealthiest residents risk being priced out

The leader of the Liberal Democrat opposition on Ealing Council, Gary Malcolm, blamed the Labour-run administration for being “too soft on developers”.

He said the council “allowed developers to rule the roost” and that developers often build large buildings, with too few truly affordable homes.



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