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Tenants hit affordability ceiling

Most residential tenants in the UK are at or near to their affordability ceiling, new figures suggest. Landlord services company Canopy analysed data from 46,000 employed renters - part of its customer base - and found that some 30% of gross (pre-tax) income on rent is typically considered affordable.

However, after tax, typical tenants are spending 35.7% of their take-home salary on rent. And one in five tenants spend at least half of their take-home salary on rent. At the higher end, 11.3% spend over 60% and 4.4% spend over 80% of take-home salary on rent.

The North East of England boasts the most affordable cities for renters, with Sunderland and Newcastle upon Tyne (33.7%) both sitting in the top three most affordable cities in the country, joined by Belfast.

Unsurprisingly, London is the least affordable region with tenants typically spending 44.3% of their take-home pay on rent. The South West and South East are close behind.

Canopy chief executive Chris Hutchinson said: “The average tenant in the UK is now spending over a third of their take-home pay on their share of the rent; in many areas of the UK the average rises higher than 40%. It is sobering to see that some tenants are even spending 80% of their salary on rent.”

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