Buy-to-let profitability rebounds as rental yield hits 10-year high

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Buy-to-let profitability has rebounded strongly with average rental yields matching their highest levels in a decade research from Pegasus Insight reveals.

Its latest Landlord Trends report (Q2 2025) shows that the average rental yield stands at 6.5%, equal to the 10-year peak reached in Q3 2024.

Regionally, landlords in the North West, North East and East Midlands report the strongest returns, all averaging above 7%, while yields in London remain lowest at 6.1%.

Profitability is also robust: 87% of landlords say they are currently making a profit, with 21% describing this as a ‘large’ profit and 66% a ‘small’ profit. Only 5% report any form of loss.

RENTERS’ RIGHTS BILL

The rebound comes against a backdrop of looming legislative change.

The Renters’ Rights Bill is expected to receive Royal Assent before the end of September, with initial measures such as the abolition of Section 21 ‘no-fault’ evictions, the shift to open-ended tenancies, annual rent increase limits and new rights for tenants around pets and advance rent due to be implemented from early 2026.

With only 14% of landlords saying they are fully aware of the details of the Bill, the uncertainty is likely to influence portfolio strategies in the months ahead.

SIGNIFICANT CHALLENGES

Bethan Cooke (main picture), director at Pegasus Insight, said: “Yields at a 10-year high are a clear signal of the enduring strength of the private rented sector.

“Despite the significant challenges landlords have faced over recent years – from higher borrowing costs to shifting tax rules – the fundamentals of tenant demand and income generation remain robust.”

“Nine in 10 landlords are still making a profit.”

And she added: “The fact that almost nine in 10 landlords are still making a profit demonstrates the sector’s ability to weather economic and policy storms.

“At the same time, the policy landscape is far from settled. The Renters’ Rights Bill represents the most significant set of changes in a generation, and while intended to protect tenants, it is also adding to landlord uncertainty.

“Our data shows landlords remain committed, but for many the coming 12 months will be a crucial period to review portfolios, financing and business models in light of what’s ahead.”

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