Private rented houses

Over the last year, 409 homeless households have been given somewhere to live thanks to a support service at Nottingham City Council.

The council’s Nottingham Private Rented Assistance Scheme (NPRAS) has worked with individuals and families to find them homes to rent, by providing support and incentives to landlords and homeless people in the city. This includes:

  • Helping people to search for accommodation and negotiating with letting agencies and landlords on their behalf
  • Helping with deposits and rent in advance, carrying out accompanied viewings and applicant checks and referencing
  • Helping with inventory and inspections and checking that every home is legally compliant and safe
  • Offering tenancy training, which prepares people for a new tenancy and includes rights and responsibilities, such as paying rent, how to carry out basic repairs such as unblocking a sink and bleeding radiators, and advice about benefits and how to claim
  • Supporting landlords in the scheme with a free service that addresses any issues in a tenancy. This includes work to prevent evictions and families being made homeless again, by helping with mediation, rent arrears, disrepair issues, anti-social behaviour and support with Universal Credit.

Case study

The team recently helped a mum and three children who found themselves homeless when they had to flee their home from domestic abuse. They were living in a family member’s spare room but couldn’t stay there long-term. The team helped the family to search for privately rented housing, which was safely away from threats of violence and they negotiated with landlords on their behalf. 

One of the landlords working with NRPAS long-term had an empty house and was able to offer this family a tenancy. The team helped the landlord by carrying out all the paperwork, including right-to-rent checks, helping to pay towards the rent in advance and issuing a written bond in lieu of a cash deposit, making sure that benefit claims were up and running so that rent would be paid.

Cllr Linda Woodings, Portfolio Holder for Planning, Housing and Heritage, said: “There are many reasons why people may become homeless, such as a landlord needing to sell their property, rent increases meaning a home may be unaffordable, loss of a job causing mortgage or rent arrears, domestic abuse and family breakdown or harassment.

“Credit problems such as County Court judgements and bankruptcy are increasingly becoming barriers to housing too. Increasingly we’re finding working families are having to live temporarily in hostels and hotels because they’ve been unable to find a privately rented home due to repeatedly failing credit checks. Our team works to make sure that people and families can move into safe and affordable homes and we support landlords to have a smooth tenancy.”

The team is looking for more landlords to house homeless individuals and families, if a landlord would like to get involved in the scheme then they need to contact the NPRAS team. More information and how to contact NPRAS is here – www.npras.co.uk/