Almost £100,000 spent buying back council housing in Bassetlaw

Watch more of our videos on ShotsTV.com 
and on Freeview 262 or Freely 565
Visit Shots! now
Bassetlaw District Council has spent almost £100,000 repurchasing former Right to Buy properties, new figures reveal.

Right to Buy legislation allows people renting local authority-owned homes to buy them at a discounted rate.

But RADAR analysis of freedom of information requests shows many councils have ended up buying back properties they had previously sold at a discount through the scheme – with £1.7 billion spent across England.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

More than a billion of this has been spent since the start of 2020. It is difficult to say whether home-buying has intensified over this time period, as many councils did not provide figures from more than five or ten years ago.

Bassetlaw District Council has spent almost £100,000 repurchasing former Right to Buy propertiesBassetlaw District Council has spent almost £100,000 repurchasing former Right to Buy properties
Bassetlaw District Council has spent almost £100,000 repurchasing former Right to Buy properties

The figures show Bassetlaw District Council has spent £85,000 on two Right to Buy properties, both of them bought before 2020.

Across England, 8,600 homes sold under Right to Buy have been subsequently purchased by local authorities, 5,900 of them since 2020.

Harry Quilter-Pinner, executive director at the Institute of Public Policy Research think tank, said: "The scale of councils selling off properties, only to buy them back a few years later, highlights the absurdity of the austerity years – selling low, buying high, short-term savings at the expense of long-term costs, penny-wise but pound-foolish.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

"As the consequences now come to bear, and councils struggle with related symptoms of the housing crisis like rising homelessness, it is crucial that the Westminster Government thinks long-term and provides sustainable funding settlements for local authorities so they can avoid this situation happening again.”

Read More
Retford salon owner celebrates being in business for 80 years

The data comprises freedom of information responses from 117 councils, 111 of which were able to provide data on how much they had spent.

Many of the biggest spenders were in London. Islington Council had spent the most, at a total cost of £146 million.

It was followed by Lambeth, which spent £112 million, while Barnet, Haringey and Brighton and Hove have each spent more than £80 million.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Across England, 23 councils have spent more than £10 million each since 2020.

Coun Claire Holland, housing spokesperson for the Local Government Association, explained that councils legally have to sell housing stock at a significantly discounted price – starting at 35 per cent for houses and 50 per cent for flats. Councils have a right of first refusal if the buyer wants to sell, but this is "invariably more than what they originally sold it for".

She said: "With councils spending vast sums on costly temporary accommodation due to the shortage of social housing, they look for ways to increase their stock, which includes buying back previous council housing.

"In order to effectively tackle housing waiting lists, councils need the powers and resources to build more of the genuinely affordable homes our communities desperately need."

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The LGA has urged reform of Right to Buy, including one-to-one replacement of lost housing stock, councils retaining 100 per cent of sales receipts, being able to set discounts locally, and excluding new builds from the scheme.

A spokesperson for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government said: "We will deliver the biggest increase in social housing and affordable housebuilding in a generation.

"This Government will work with in partnership with councils so that together we can build the homes this country desperately needs."

Related topics:

Comment Guidelines

National World encourages reader discussion on our stories. User feedback, insights and back-and-forth exchanges add a rich layer of context to reporting. Please review our Community Guidelines before commenting.