Tuesday, 13
May 2025 - 09:58
Freezing
social rents for 500,000 private landlord tenants "practically
impossible"
It is
“practically impossible” to freeze the rents of the around 500,000 social
housing tenants who rent from private landlords, people involved told NOS.
Compensating the landlords involved will be very complicated and the government
doesn’t have the money to do so, the broadcaster’s sources said.
Freezing
social rents was one of PVV leader Geert Wilders’ most fervent demands in the
massive 25-hour negotiation session for the spring budget update. The
government and coalition agreed that social housing rents will not increase in
the coming two years. Housing corporations will receive over 1 billion euros in
compensation for this. Housing corporations own around 2 million social housing
units.
But the
negotiators seemingly forgot about the around 500,000 other social housing
tenants renting from private landlords. No compensation was agreed for these
landlords, and Housing Minister Mona Keijzer set aside no money for this. She
could take some of the money from the housing corporations’ compensation, but
they are already threatening to go to court because they find the amount too
low. The housing corporations warn that they’ll be able to build far fewer
homes due to the rent freeze.
And even if
the Minister finds money to compensate the private landlords, doing so will be
“practically impossible,” NOS’s sources said. Each landlord would have to be
compensated individually, and there is no overview or central register of who
these landlords are. The operation of finding them, figuring out how much to
compensate them, and paying out the money will likely cost many times more than
the compensation itself, the sources said.
Vastgoed
Belang, the organization that represents private landlords, informed Keijzer
that they would rather increase rents than receive compensation. “Compensation
is complex and never complete,” chairman Niek Verra told NOS. “This also allows
landlords to invest less in making homes more sustainable.”
But if
private social housing landlords increase their rents while housing
corporations don’t, a distinction is made between social housing tenants, and
“that is also inexplicable,” the broadcaster’s sources said. Minister Keijzer
is looking for a solution nd promised to present a proposal within two weeks.
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