Why Rental Repossessions Are On The Rise
Tuesday, April 7th, 2009    Subscribe To Our FeedIt’s not just homeowners and those with a mortgage that are feeling the crunch in the current economic climate! Tenants too are facing difficulties, either through circumstances that mean they can’t find enough money for the rent each month or they face the prospect of eviction because their landlords can’t pay their mortgage.
For those tenants in difficulties because they cannot meet rental payments, Guardian is currently working with letting agents to get in early with help. Often it’s the mounting burden of accumulated, unsecured debt or changes to income levels and employment that can lead tenants into a position where they could face eviction. Consolidating unsecured debts in a debt management programme can free up income to enable the tenant to pay the rent and avoid losing their home.
But a Debt Management Programme is not a long term solution. It does provide some breathing space to allow you start regaining control by putting household bills first (rent, gas, electricity, council tax) and offering sustainable but reduced payments to your unsecured creditors (personal loans, credit cards, HP agreements).
This is usually achieved through an IVA - essentially a formal agreement with your creditors that will last for 60 months. Guardian can set up a meeting with your creditors (at which you need not be present) to discuss affordable proposals, which when agreed means that interest and debt charges are frozen. The IVA must be supervised by an Insolvency Practitioner and the payment that is agreed is legally binding. Upon completion of the IVA you will be considered ‘debt free’, even though you may not have actually paid it all off, and any outstanding balances will be written off.
A similar arrangement, called a Protected Trust Deed, is available for tenants who live north of the border. Under Scottish law, if you do qualify, you could cancel out up to 90% of your debt and pay the rest in 36 affordable monthly instalments. It’s similar to an IVA as it must also be supervised by a licensed Insolvency Practitioner who is responsible for negotiations with your creditors and ensuring you keep to the terms of the Trust Deed.
Even for tenants who have consistently made rental payments, many have had to move following repossession notices. In many cases, the first any sitting tenant or tenant about to move into a property knows about the situation is when they discover bailiffs in their home or that the locks have been changed.
The Civil Protection Rules are changing so that tenants have slightly better rights in these circumstances. Mortgage lenders intending to repossess will now have to send notice to tenants within five days of receiving notification of a court hearing date (which is often several weeks ahead) rather than being informed 14 days before the actual hearing date itself as is currently the case. So reslistically, that should mean that tenants ought to get around three to seven week’s notice of a possession hearing. But that could depend on which type of mortgage your landlord has. If it’s the wrong sort of mortgage, the tenant could still not get any notice of possession at all.
One good idea is to always open mail addressed ‘To the Occupier’, as this may include notice of any possession hearings. Make sure your landlord has permission from their lender to rent the property out, otherwise the lender is not obliged to recognise the tenancy at all. Try to find out as much as possible about your prospective landlord and their mortgage status before taking up a tenancy and if things do go pear shaped, but you were already living in the premises when the mortgage was taken out, the landlord’s lender may take you on as a tenant and allow you to pay rent to them directly.
Technorati Tags: No Tags
Related Tags: No Tags
Possible Related Posts






















