The landlords’ view of the rental market | Letters
Letters: It isn’t a story of villains and victims, but a housing system under strain, writes Nick Vernoum. Plus a letter from John Farquhar
silverguide.site –
Your article on landlords (I thought landlords were unchallengeable – until I met one of mine at a party, 22 April) paints them as shadowy figures wielding quiet power, but the reality is often more ordinary – and more complicated. I’m an “accidental landlord”. In my 40s, after working long hours to buy a modest home, I became seriously ill with chronic fatigue and had to move back in with my parents. Letting my house wasn’t about exploitation; it was about survival – covering a mortgage I could no longer sustain through work.
Over time, I reinvested carefully, and I now own a small number of properties. The income isn’t lavish; it has supported my parents and given me a chance to rebuild my life. I know my tenants well. They can contact me any time, and I sort problems quickly.
I would far rather they were able to buy homes of their own. They are hard-working people in the NHS and the care sector, but the barriers to getting a mortgage remain high.
What’s missing from the debate is that landlords are also being squeezed. Mortgage rates rose sharply after the turmoil under Liz Truss’s government, while maintenance, regulation and tax costs continue to climb. Many small landlords are exiting because the numbers no longer work.
The uncomfortable truth is that when landlords sell, tenants lose homes. This isn’t a story of villains and victims, but a housing system under strain, failing tenants and the small landlords who house them.
Nick Vernoum
Yeovil, Somerset
• My wife and I rent out two flats that we refurbished and maintain to a standard that we would be content to live with. In fact we sometimes live in our flats between tenancies, just to make sure we are happy with them. We believe we are providing comfortable, safe, secure homes for tenants. Our rents remain static during tenancies, or else increase only minimally.
There are many landlords like us. But if you read coverage of the topic by the Guardian, you’d think we all had horns and tails, and ate small children for breakfast. You are demonising us and many honest, decent people like us. Please stop. By all means expose the bad ’uns – their behaviour disgusts us, too – but let’s have some balance in your reporting.
John Farquhar
St Boswells, Scottish Borders
• Have an opinion on anything you’ve read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

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