The Simon Communities of Ireland’s quarterly Locked Out of the Market report shows yet another stark decline in the availability of affordable properties to rent by people reliant on Housing Assistance Payment (HAP ) Scheme. The report comes in the context of a private rental market affected by a documented ongoing contraction in supply, increase in rental prices, and an overall lack of affordability.
There were just 37 properties available under a standard or discretionary limit in at least one of the four categories. This represented a decrease of 43% on the 80 properties which were available within at least one HAP category in the March 2022 study and a drastic 95% less than the 906 available this time last year (June 2021 ).
Of the 37 properties, only two were affordable under a standard HAP limit. The remaining 35 fell under discretionary rates. As seen in many recent Locked Out of the Market reports, the supply of properties within HAP limits was predominantly available in Dublin; 27 of the total 37 HAP properties were found in the three Dublin areas examined (Dublin City Centre, Dublin City North and Dublin City South ).
Across all the areas surveyed, there were only 657 unique properties available to rent at any price within the 16 study areas over the three dates surveyed. This represented a decrease of 11% from the 737 properties available to rent in the March 2022Locked Out of the Market report.
Outside of Dublin, properties available to rent within HAP limits are worryingly low; nine of the 16 study areas had no properties available to rent in any household category within standard or discretionary HAP limits. These were Cork City Centre, Dublin City Centre, Galway City Centre, Galway City Suburbs, Co. Leitrim, Limerick City suburbs, Limerick City Centre, Sligo Town, and Portlaoise. This is not unexpected, given the discretionary HAP limit extends to 50% in Dublin, while the rest of the country is limited to only 20%.
The Locked Out of the Market report examines the experience of people on a low income and dependent on Housing Assistance Payment (HAP ) to access housing in the private rental market. It also looks at the availability of homes to rent over a three-day period in June 2022. The report considers the availability of properties within both the standard and discretionary HAP limits in 16 areas around the country for four household categories: single person, couple, couple/one parent and one child and couple/one parent and two children.