Doncaster housing benefit tenants forced to find extra £61 per month to meet rising rents

Housing benefits tenants in Doncaster are being forced to find an extra £61 every month to meet rising private rents and put a roof over their heads, new analysis suggests.
Watch more of our videos on Shots! 
and live on Freeview channel 276
Visit Shots! now

Local Housing Allowance is a housing benefit payment made to those eligible for Universal Credit and is meant to cover the cheapest 30% of rooms in a shared house on the private rental market.

Figures from youth homelessness charity Centrepoint show just one in 13 local authorities in England provide sufficient housing benefit for people living in the area.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The charity said without the Government raising housing benefit rates, people face homelessness amid soaring rental prices.

Just one in 13 local authorities in England provide sufficient housing benefit for people living in the areaJust one in 13 local authorities in England provide sufficient housing benefit for people living in the area
Just one in 13 local authorities in England provide sufficient housing benefit for people living in the area

The figures show people renting from private landlords who are eligible for housing benefits in Doncaster will receive £264 per month from the local housing allowance this year.

The median rent for a room in a shared house in Doncaster is £379, while the cheapest 25 per cent of rents cost up to £325.

Housing allowance would cover just 81 per cent of that price, leaving people needing to find an extra £61 per month to put a roof over their heads.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Across the country, just one in 13 local authorities provide sufficient housing benefit to afford the cheapest quarter of rental properties, while the average shortfall is more than £90 per month, though many areas top £100.

Centrepoint said people on low incomes renting homes are competing with one another, paying soaring costs and offering lump sums to secure properties.

Alicia Walker from Centrepoint, said: "This is particularly worrying for those vulnerable young people who rely on Universal Credit to keep a roof over their heads.

"The fact is that if you’re on a low or fixed income then no amount of clever budgeting is going to help you find an additional £100 or more to cover the rent.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"The Government has asked low-income renters to defy the gravity of this crisis and somehow find the money to cover the spiralling costs.

"That simply isn’t possible for most young households and, without the Government increasing rates immediately, many could face losing their home."

The latest Office for National Statistics figures show prices for all rental properties in Yorkshire have increased by 4.5 per cent in the year to January, while average rents have risen by 4.3 per cent.

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.