The white paper also addresses the need to change the private rental market, but does not take into account the specific needs of people in later life. There is an increasing number of older private renters – 200,000 older adults joined the rental market in the last four years, and it’s estimated that a third of over 60-year-olds could be living in private rental property by 2040. But they could face non-regulated rents; loose landlord regulations; short-term tenancies; and poor housing standards with houses in disrepair and not adapted for their needs.
All these issues need to be addressed if the housing market is to meet the changing needs of our ageing population.