Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

#VentYourRent used by Londoners to shame landlords of dirty, unsafe property

Hundreds of Londoners have shared their despair via the hashtags #VentYourRent and #RantYourRent

Zlata Rodionova
Friday 29 April 2016 15:29 BST
Comments
Twitter
Twitter

Frustrated London tenants have taken their anger to Twitter in a campaign showing the extent of the housing crisis.

Hundreds of Londoners have shared their despair via the hashtags #VentYourRent and #RantYourRent launched by campaign group Generation Rent.

Bed bugs and cockroaches, rats, the absence of heating and generally dangerous living conditions are just some of the problems that renters in the capital have to live with, may of whom pay extremely high rent for the privilege.

One person wrote: “One week’s notice before decorators started work, two months living in a building site – no discount, 30 per cent rent rise after”.

Another tenant from Leyton, with a rent of £1000 per month said: “Worst experience, nearly got carbon monoxide by a dodgy boiler”.

(Tumbl)

A female tenant who pays £500 per month for rent said condensation led to carpet mushrooms.

(Tumblr (Tumblr)

Owning a house in London is becoming increasingly unaffordable.

More than half of 20 to 39 year-olds, so-called Generation Rent, will be forced to privately rent by the year 2025, according to a recent report by PwC.

But three in ten privately rented homes are considered “non-decent”, according to Generation Rent campaigners.

“The reasons are pretty clear: most tenants are on short term contracts – not knowing if you’ll have to move in the next year makes it difficult to feel at home or part of the local community. The condition of private rented properties is more likely to be poor or dangerous to health,” Generation Rent campaigners said.

The cost of private renting is not cheap either. Some 39 per cent of private renters said that they had to cut down on heating because of the cost of rent and a third is cutting back on food, according to a 2014 ComRes survey of more than 1,000 adults.

Campaigners have asked Londoners to keep sharing their stories ahead of next week’s London mayoral elections.

Sian Berry, green candidate for Mayor of London said she will support the #VentYourRentCampaign while Labour’s candidate Sadiq Khan pledged to build “genuinely affordable” homes both to buy and rent.

First-time buyers hoping to buy a home in 2016 will have already spent an average £52,900 on rent, according to data from the Association of Residental Letting Agents (Arla).

This means the average buyer this year will have spent 16.4 per cent of their total lifetime earnings on rent in the years they were a tenant.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in