Renting a home now €274 per month above Celtic Tiger peak

The cost of renting a home continues to soar — rents are now €274 a month past their previous peak during the days of the Celtic Tiger.

Renting a home now €274 per month above Celtic Tiger peak

By Dan Buckley

The cost of renting a home continues to soar — rents are now €274 a month past their previous peak during the days of the Celtic Tiger.

Rents rose nationwide by an average of 12.4% in the year to June 2018, according to the latest quarterly rental report by property website, Daft.ie.

This represents the ninth consecutive quarter in which a new all-time high for rents has been set and also in which annual inflation in rents has been greater than 10%.

The average monthly rent nationwide during the second quarter of 2018 was €1,304. This is €274 a month higher than the previous peak in 2008 and more than €560 higher than the low seen in late 2011.

In Dublin, the increase in rents in the year to June 2018 was 13.4% and rents in the capital are now 34%, or almost €500 a month, higher than their previous peak a decade ago. Rents continue to rise rapidly in other cities also. In Limerick, rents were 20.7% higher than a year ago, while in Waterford, the increase was 19.3%.

Galway saw its rents increase by 15.9% in the same period, while in Cork, rents rose by 12.8%. Outside the five main cities, rents rose by an average of 10.4%. The average rent nationwide has risen by just over 75% since bottoming out in late 2011.

There were 3,070 properties available to rent nationwide on August 1. This marks a 4.8% increase on the same figure a year ago but, aside from August 2017, the total availability is the lowest on record, going back to 2006.

The small increase nationally was driven by Dublin, where availability improved from 1,121 to 1,397 comparing this August to a year ago. Elsewhere in the country, availability continues to fall.

Commenting on the report, Ronan Lyons, an economist at Trinity College Dublin and author of the Daft Report, said:

While the building of new homes appears to be having some effect in the sales market, with inflation easing somewhat, there is no counterpart in the rental sector. While urban apartments make up almost all the net need for new homes in the country as a whole, just 13% of new homes completed in the year to March were urban apartments. In that context, it is unsurprising to see rents rise once more. As before, with such a mismatch between supply and demand, policy must focus on dramatically increasing the construction of urban apartments, for both market and social housing needs.

Reacting to the report, Shane De Rís, president of the students’ union at Trinity College Dublin warned that the high cost of accommodation is forcing some students out of third level education.

It is tragic that yet again we’ll see students forced out of education due to the financial strain placed on them by the housing market, forced to delay their future due to Government inaction,” he said.

“There is no easy-fix to this crisis, but the time for action has already arrived. The housing crisis is the biggest obstacle facing the future of higher education in this country today.”

Martin Clancy from Daft.ie said: “At the moment we are seeing on average, over 1,000 property searches taking place every minute on Daft.ie.”

Average rents, and year-on-year change, Q2 2018

- Dublin: €1,936, up 13.4%

- Cork: €1,266, up 12.8%

- Galway: €1,189, up 15.9%

- Limerick: €1,109, up 20.7%

- Waterford: €921, up 19.3%

- Rest of the country: €909, up 10.4%

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