Rental yields up annually despite quarterly dip

Average annual rental yields rose across England & Wales in the second quarter of 2026 but the majority of regions experience a shorter-term dip.

This figures were revealed in Fleet Mortgages’ Q2 2026 Rental Barometer.
It shows that annual rental yields across the majority of regions within England and Wales continued to rise albeit with six out of 10 regions seeing a quarterly dip.

At a national level, average yields for England & Wales rose by 0.3% annually to 7.8%. But quarter-to-quarter there has been a dip from 8.1% in Q1.

REGIONAL DIFFERENCES

There has been movement in the regional table since the last quarter, but the North East region continues to lead with annual rental yields up by 0.5%, however quarter-to-quarter it too has seen a fall of 0.6% to 9.2%.

The North West has moved into second spot with an average rental yield of 8.8% and six regions continue to hold above 8%, with the other four being Yorkshire & Humberside, Wales, and both the East and West Midlands.

Higher-yielding areas in the North and Midlands are continuing to outperform the South, with Wales and the South West seeing an annual fall. However, the majority of regions have seen a quarterly fall in average yields, with the only exceptions being the East Midlands, Greater London and the North West which saw increases, and the South East which stayed the same.

There was positive news in terms of purchase activity which grew quarter-on-quarter for Fleet from 33% in Q1 to 36% in Q2. This, the lender said, was a figure closer to that of a year ago when purchases accounted for 39% of all lending business and was a positive move for the sector.

The share of applications received from landlords with six-14 properties grew from 26% in Q1 to 30% in Q2, while landlords with 15 or more properties accounted for 26% of applications. At the same time, first-time landlord applications represented 9% of all business, slightly down on the 11% recorded in the first three months of the year.

GETTING PROFESSIONAL

Fleet also highlighted how the professionalisation of the landlord community was continuing with the average number of investment properties held by Fleet borrowers maintained at 16, compared to 10 in Q2 last year. Adding to this theme, limited company business continued to dominate with 78% of all borrowing coming from corporate vehicles, compared to just 22% for private investors.

Steve Cox, Fleet Mortgages
Steve Cox, Fleet Mortgages

Steve Cox, chief commercial officer at Fleet Mortgages, says: “Q2 for the buy-to-let, and wider, mortgage market has effectively been a ‘flip reverse’ of Q1. It began with considerable uncertainty as financial markets reacted to events in the Middle East, meaning funding costs increased and lenders had to adjust pricing accordingly.

“However, the latter weeks of June in particular have been much more encouraging, with greater stability returning, swap rates easing and lenders like ourselves once again able to compete through lower rates and a broader range of products.

“While it’s important not to assume this calmer environment will continue indefinitely, the market is undoubtedly ending the quarter in a stronger position than many expected a few months ago. The MPC has held Bank Base Rate, inflation looks like it has, to some extent, been contained and advisers have a much-improved range of options for their landlord borrower clients.”

THE NEW NORMAL

Cox adds that periods of volatility have become a feature of the mortgage market rather than an exception, and advisers and landlords increasingly understand this ‘new normal’.

He says: “The important point is that when conditions improve, as they have during the latter part of this quarter, the market is able to respond quickly, providing borrowers with greater choice and improved pricing.

“That should give confidence as we move into the second half of the year, even if we continue to expect markets to remain sensitive to wider economic, UK political and geopolitical events.”

Author

Top 5 This Week

Related Posts