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Housing supply in London will meet only 40% of need by 2035

Housing supply in London is projected to meet only 40% of the Government’s estimate of housing need with London’s population expected to exceed 10 million by 2035, with a rise of 345,000 people in Inner London alone according to research commissioned by Dolphin Living and conducted by Savills.

Jacqui Daly, Director at Savills Research, said: “London’s housing crisis is worsening, with those on lower incomes bearing the heaviest burden. There has been a persistent mismatch in the supply and demand of new homes in London. Reduced housebuilding combined with high prices is putting further pressure on already stretched resources and household budgets. Decisive government intervention is needed to support housing demand, and a step-change is essential to create a more affordable and sustainable housing market for Londoners.”

Even if Inner London were to deliver all identified capacity over the next 10 years, 78% of housing will be absorbed by projected household growth rather than improve affordability and mitigate the impact of the housing crisis

The outcome of this mismatch between need and supply will result in a 43% increase in the number of households who cannot afford to live within Inner London by 2035. Overall, 1.2 million households will be priced out of London as a whole.  

Olivia Harris, Chief Executive at Dolphin Living, said: “As of today 900,000 households in London cannot afford market housing that meets their needs, yet don’t qualify for social housing, with Inner London alone accounting for 200,000 of those. In ten years’ time, due to population growth, that figure is expected to increase across Inner London by 43%.

“This means that thousands of new jobs in key sectors like health, education and tourism are likely to go unfilled as median income workers are effectively priced out of the housing market and look to live and work elsewhere. The economic impact will be most acutely felt in Inner London, given 73% of those jobs will be within Inner London.

“However, there are solutions, but they involve a change in approach. We need to build more homes for workers on median incomes to support those who currently cannot afford housing that meets their needs as well as the hundreds of thousands of new workers. Homes for intermediate rent for workers on median incomes in Inner London should be a key focus within future housing and economic growth policy.” 

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