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UK room rents flatlining; early signs flatshare supply is under threat

  • UK room rents continued to flatline in the first quarter of 2026. The average UK rent is now £747 per month; almost no change on the previous year.
  • Cities bucking that trend include Carlisle and Inverness. Average rents here have risen 8% and 7% respectively year on year.
  • Is this the calm before the storm? Room rental supply growth from landlords and agents is now slowing.

The UK average room rent barely moved in the year to Q1 2026, according to rental index data from flatshare site SpareRoom and now stands at £747 per month.

This picture is consistent across much of the country with the South West of England seeing the biggest change of any region: rents here are up 1.5% on the previous year to £677 per month.

However, six UK cities have seen year-on-year rent rises of 6% or higher: Carlisle (+8%), Inverness (+7%), Gloucester (+6%), Durham (+6%), Worcester (+6%) and Salisbury (+6%).

The table below shows UK average room rents by country/region and the YOY change:

Country/Region Average monthly room rent Q1 2026 Average monthly room rent Q1 2025 Year-on-year change
South West £677 £666 1.5%
Wales £588 £584 0.8%
Northern Ireland £568 £565 0.6%
East Midlands £568 £565 0.6%
North West £610 £607 0.5%
Yorkshire and Humberside £560 £559 0.3%
South East £744 £745 -0.1%
West Midlands £585 £586 -0.1%
North East £549 £550 -0.1%
Scotland £673 £676 -0.4%
East Anglia £674 £679 -0.6%
London £978 £983 -0.5%
UK £747 £746 0.1%
UK (excl London) £668 £665 0.5%

The table below shows the top 10 ighest-rising cities for rent in the year to Q1 2026:

City Average monthly room rent Q1 2026 Average monthly room rent Q1 2025 Year-on-year change
Carlisle £565 £521 8.4%
Inverness £667 £624 6.9%
Gloucester £624 £588 6.0%
Durham £620 £586 5.9%
Worcester £585 £553 5.8%
Salisbury £685 £649 5.5%
Preston £546 £519 5.3%
Perth £541 £514 5.2%
Bradford £488 £464 5.1%
Lancaster £581 £555 4.6%

The table below shows the UK's most and least expensive towns and cities outside inner London:

UK's most expensive towns/cities UK's least expensive towns/cities
Town/City Average monthly room rent Q1 2026 Town/City Average monthly room rent Q1 2026
Twickenham £902 Stockton-on-Tees £459
Kingston upon Thames £884 Burnley £469
Esher £855 Middlesbrough £472
Barnet £850 Huddersfield £484
Epsom £825 Bradford £488
Bath £821 Barnsley £490
Oxford £821 Scunthorpe £497
Staines £816 Craigavon (incl Lurgan & Portadown) £497
St. Albans £816 Grimsby £498
Brentwood £812 Blackburn £499

High rents transforming flatshare dynamics

While stable rents are better than rising rents, they're not necessarily affordable. Huge demand after the pandemic caused rents to soar, and they've remained stubbornly high since, as shown in the graph below. The high cost of renting is transforming the dynamics of shared households, with flatsharers getting older and couples and children now a common feature.

A graph showing the UK average room rents; a 10 year review

Room rental supply growth slows

Looking at room ads placed by landlords and letting agents in the month of January - the biggest month of the year for new flatshare ads - there are early signs flatshare supply may be under threat. Although supply has grown for the past three consecutive years, supply growth in the year to January 2026 dropped to +4.2% from +13.8% growth in the year to January 2025. This comes just ahead of the phasing in of the Renters' Rights Act from 1 May.

Matt Hutchinson, director at flatshare site SpareRoom, comments: “Landlords have been telling us of their plans to quit the market or reduce their portfolios for many months but, until now, we've not seen that reflected in supply, which has been trending upwards since the aftermath of the pandemic. Slowing room supply growth is of huge concern when rooms in flatshares are such a critical source of affordable housing. If the supply-demand imbalance gets any worse, UK rents - which, although stable are already hugely inflated due to post-pandemic demand - will start to rise again. We're concerned this may be the calm before the storm.”