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Housing Minister announces plans to
raise standards across the property agent sector.
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Chaired by , a new working group
will make recommendations to better support homebuyers,
sellers, landlords, leaseholders and tenants.
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The group will report their findings to government by
summer 2019. 
Plans to raise standards across the entire property agent sector
so home buyers, sellers, tenants, landlords and leaseholders
receive the best service possible have been announced today (12
October 2018) by Housing Minister MP.
A new working group,
chaired by , and made up of experts from
across the property sector will consider options. This will
include the case for regulation and the introduction of mandatory
qualifications for all property agents so tenants, homebuyers and
sellers can be confident they are getting a professional service
and are being charged fairly.
At the moment, anyone can operate as a property agent without any
qualifications or professional oversight. Many take a
professional approach and sign up to standards of practice
through membership of a professional body, but others do not.
The working group will consider the entire property agent sector
to ensure any new framework, including any professional
qualifications requirements, a Code of Practice, and a proposed
independent regulator, is consistent across letting, managing and
estate agents.
Speaking following the announcement, Housing Minister, MP said:
For too long, many people have faced incurring fees and bad
service from a number of property agents. People should have
confidence when buying, selling or renting a home.
’s wealth of knowledge will
provide a valuable insight and help us make necessary changes
to ensure consumers have confidence when buying, selling,
letting or renting their home.
will be joined by
representatives of agents and consumers, as well as independent
experts, with the group instructed to report back to government
in summer 2019.
said:
There have been calls for tighter, fairer regulation of
property agents from those representing tenants, landlords and
agents themselves.
I am delighted to work with government, industry and consumers
to advise on how we can accomplish this in practice, and I look
forward to our working group achieving real progress together.
Other members of the group include representatives from the Royal
Institute of Chartered Surveyors (RICS), the National Landlords
Association, Citizens Advice, the Association of Residential
Letting Agents (ARLA Propertymark) and the National Association
of Estate Agents (NAEA Propertymark). This is to ensure the
entire sector is represented and the needs of both businesses and
consumers are considered.
is an independent cross
bencher and social housing leader. See his full biography.
The principal aim of the Regulating Property Agents
Working Group will be to advise the government on a new
regulatory approach to letting, managing and estate agents, in
line with the government’s responses to its calls for evidence
on:
- protecting consumers in the letting and managing agent market
- and improving the home buying and selling process
In particular, the Working Group will be responsible for advising
on:
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a model for an independent property-agent regulator,
including how it will operate and how it will enforce
compliance
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a single, mandatory and legally-enforceable Code of Practice
for letting and managing agents, and whether similar could be
provided for estate agents
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a system of minimum entry requirements and continuing
professional development for letting, managing and estate
agents
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a standardised approach for presenting transparent service
charges to leaseholders and freeholders
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an easier statutory-backed process for consumers to challenge
unfair service charges
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whether other fees and charges which affect both leaseholders
and freeholders are justified; should be capped or banned
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further measures to professionalise estate agency
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as well as additional matters which in its opinion support
the aims above
Recommendations are of relevance to the whole of the UK. Lettings
and managing agents powers are devolved, but estate agency powers
are reserved.
A recent survey by
Which? found that 85% of landlords who use an agent are satisfied
with the service and 67% of tenants were satisfied with the way
their agent repairs and maintains their home.