Increasing housing supply and reducing temporary accommodation
use.
A range of measures have been taken by the Scottish Government to
increase investment in housebuilding and help reduce the number
of households in temporary accommodation since declaring a
housing emergency last year.
Actions taken in the last year include:
- Investing £600 million in affordable housing in 2024/25. £40
million of which was used to purchase properties and bring empty
social homes back into use.
- Helping to reduce the number of households in temporary
accommodation in 12 council areas, according to the latest
figures.
- Making an additional £1 million available to Registered
Social Landlords and third sector organisations to prevent
homelessness and support people to stay in rented accommodation.
- Boosting supply through other funding models, including the
Charitable Bonds programme which has seen investment of £46m in
the past year, supporting the delivery of 325 homes.
Further action will be taken in the coming year to continue to
tackle the housing emergency and ensure more people can access a
safe and affordable home, including:
- Investing £768 million in this financial year in affordable
housing, which will support the delivery of 8,000 homes for
social and mid-market rent and low-cost home ownership.
- Providing local authorities with £15 billion this financial
year for a range of services, including in homelessness services.
- £2 million invested through the Scottish Empty Homes
Partnership to continue to reduce the number of privately owned
empty homes.
Commenting, Social Justice Secretary said:
“Providing everyone in Scotland the right to a warm, safe and
affordable home is essential to our key priority of eradicating
child poverty. The measures we have taken have meant increased
investment in the affordable housing sector and fewer families
living in temporary accommodation.
“As a result of our actions, an estimated more than 2,600
households with children have been helped into affordable housing
in the year up to December 2024.
“We have delivered 136,000 affordable homes, with 97,000 of those
for social rent, between 2007 and the end of December 2024. We
are also working to identify and turn around empty private and
social homes and encouraging more funding streams into the sector
through our Housing Investment Taskforce.
“It is encouraging that we are seeing a reduction in families in
temporary accommodation in some local authority areas. However,
we know there is more to do which is why we have increased the
affordable housing budget for this financial year by £200 million
to £768 million. In the longer term we will also introduce
homelessness prevention measures and a system of long-term rent
controls in our Housing Bill.
“We are determined to tackle the housing emergency and ensure
that everyone in Scotland can have somewhere to call home.”