The price of renting a home in Laois has increased in Quarter 3 of 2021.
The average rent price in Q2 of 2021 was €1,084 and it increased by €24 to €1,108 in Q3.
Rents were on average 7.6% higher in the third three months of 2021 than a year previously, according to the latest Daft.ie survey.
The average listed rent is now €1,108, up 120% from its lowest point.
The average one bedroom apartment will cost you €795 per month, (up 4.8% from Q3 of 2020) while €922 (up 8.4%) is the average for a two bedroom house.
€1,040 (up 6.7%) is the average three bedroom house and €1,177 (up 7.4%) will get you a four bedroom house.
While Daft say that €1,274 (up 0.8%) is the average five bedroom house.
Rents in Leinster’s midland counties rose 9.0% year-on-year, reflecting a sharp fall in availability – just 41 homes were available to rent on November 1, the lowest on record.
Nationwide rents in the third quarter of 2021 were an average of 6.8% higher than the same period in 2020, according to the latest Rental Report by Daft.ie.
The average monthly rent nationwide between July and September was €1,516, up 2.6% on the first quarter and more than double the low of €742 per month seen in late 2011.
The increase in rents around the country reflects an on-going and unprecedented scarcity of rental homes.
Nationwide, there were just 1,460 homes available to rent on November 1st, an all-time low in a series that extends back to January 2006.
Indeed, the level of availability now is almost half the lowest level recorded between the start of 2006 and the outbreak of Covid19, which was 2,706 in mid-2019.
While Dublin had initially seen an increase in availability after the start of the pandemic, there were just 820 homes available to rent on November 1st, the lowest ever recorded for the city in two decades.
In Dublin and in the other cities, the stock of homes to rent is between 70% and 80% lower than a year ago.
Outside the cities, availability continues to fall – with just 559 homes to rent, down almost half on a year ago.
While rents rose around the country between June and September, there remains significant differences in annual inflation rates.
Rents in Dublin are just 2.7% higher than a year ago, while rents in Cork and Galway are 6.9% and 8.3% higher.
Inflation in Limerick and Waterford cities is higher again, at 8.9% and 10% respectively, while rents outside the cities are 11.9% higher than a year ago. In parts of Connacht, rents rose by 20% in the twelve months to September.
Commenting on the report, Ronan Lyons, economist at Trinity College Dublin and author of the Daft Report, said: “Covid-19 temporarily reshuffled Ireland’s rental problems but the latest figures confirm those problems of shortages are getting worse over time.
“While Dublin had initially seen an increase in rental availability, with the number of rental homes on the market doubling from 1,600 to nearly 3,200 in 2020, those trends have reversed rapidly, with just over 800 homes available to rent on November 1st.
“In Ireland’s four other cities, there were 81 homes available to rent in total.
“While some argue against the construction of large numbers of purpose-built rental homes, any solution to the chronic shortage of rental homes in Ireland must include building new ones.
“In this regard, the pipeline of almost 45,000 new build-to-rent homes – while concentrated in the Dublin area – is particularly welcome. More than 50,000 more rental homes have been proposed.
“Their construction would help improve the availability and affordability of rental homes, something for policymakers and planners to consider.”
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