Rental yields across England and Wales have risen to 8.1%, demonstrating that income returns for residential property investors are strengthening despite regulatory pressures and rising borrowing costs, according to latest Property118 data released today.
Higher yields reflect the combination of sustained rental growth and stabilizing property prices, improving the cash-flow proposition for buy-to-let investors. With average UK rents at £1,319 and growing 1.9% annually, while house price growth moderates to 2.2%, the yield equation is shifting favorably toward income investors.
The 8.1% average yield provides compelling returns compared to alternative asset classes. UK government bonds currently yield approximately 4.5%, while savings accounts offer 3-4%, making residential property's 8.1% income return particularly attractive, especially when combined with Savills' forecast of 22.2% capital appreciation by 2030.
Regional variations create even stronger opportunities. Northern England, Scotland, and Wales typically deliver yields exceeding 8.1%, with some markets achieving 9-10% gross yields on well-selected properties. These higher-yielding markets also benefit from projected capital growth of 27-28% over five years.
For income-focused investors, strengthening yields validate the buy-to-let investment case. Despite regulatory headwinds including the Renters' Rights Act and Making Tax Digital, the fundamental income proposition of UK residential property investment is improving, supported by chronic undersupply (rental stock 16% below 2018-19 levels) and sustained tenant demand.