Millions of people are in a daily struggle to afford the roof over their head. Around 2.6 million people are pushed into poverty because their housing costs are so high. Housing is both a major monthly expense and a source of great insecurity, feeding a sense that this country is broken. With the government’s focus on the cost of living, ministers cannot afford to ignore this.
In recent months, the government has made some welcome progress on housing policy. Planning reform will help address the housing shortages that led to rapid price increases. A £250 cap on annual ground rents will reduce leaseholders’ bills. Government investment will deliver thousands more social homes each year, which will be genuinely affordable for people to rent. And the Renters’ Rights Act will limit rent increases to once a year, cut rent demanded in advance, and ban bidding wars. These are major successes which will improve many people’s lives.
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But these policies must mark only the beginning of a more comprehensive set of measures to cut housing costs. By tackling this through comprehensive action, the government can make our country affordable again for everyone.
Cutting costs must be embedded into every policy – so the 1.5m new homes target focus on delivering enough good quality, affordable homes to buy or rent, not just building lots of units that are expensive to buy and costly to run. And it is about the wider community that homes sit within. Well-designed places can ensure people have access to affordable services, like public transport.
The immediate priority is the private rented sector. Around one in five householdsrent privately. And in December 2025, the average monthly rent in England was over £1,400 – up 4 per cent on a year earlier. Compared to a decade earlier, private rents have increased by £440 a month.