The predicted mass landlord exodus following the Renters' Rights Act has failed to materialise. Instead, new research from Foundation Home Loans reveals that professional investors are doubling down on the UK private rented sector (PRS), with confidence rising and 61% planning rent increases averaging 5.7% over the next 12 months.
The Q1 2026 Landlord Trends report, conducted with Pegasus Insight, shows that 84% of landlords report profitable lettings, while average rental yields have climbed to 6.5%. Portfolio values and rental income both increased quarter-on-quarter, contradicting the narrative of widespread divestment that dominated headlines in late 2025.
Market Consolidation, Not Collapse
Rather than a sector in retreat, the data points to structural consolidation. The proportion of landlords planning to stay in the market rose to 63%, up from 58% in Q4 2025. Average portfolio size has increased to 7.3 properties, signalling that serious, well-capitalised investors are acquiring stock from exiting amateurs.
Grant Hendry, director of sales at Foundation, noted: "Investors are taking a structured, long-term approach, and there is clear evidence of landlords planning ahead, whether that is through refinancing activity or preparing for future EPC requirements."
Nearly 40% of landlords with borrowing plan to remortgage within the year, while 62% with lower-rated EPC properties intend to upgrade to meet 2030 compliance standards. This is not the behaviour of a sector in panic it is the hallmark of professional operators positioning for long-term returns.
Rental Demand Remains Robust
While 43% of landlords reported void periods and 30% experienced rental arrears in the past year, these figures reflect a normalising market rather than structural weakness. Tenant demand has softened from the fever pitch of 2023-2024, but rental growth continues at 5.7% projected annually well above inflation and wage growth.
Separate data from Fleet Mortgages shows rental yields reached 8.1% in Q1 2026, up from 7.4% a year earlier. The North West, Wales, and the North East are delivering the strongest regional yields, driven by accessible entry prices and resilient rent increases.
The Opportunity for Patient Capital
The regulatory environment has raised the bar for entry, filtering out undercapitalised and part-time landlords. For institutional-grade investors and portfolio landlords with strong balance sheets, this represents an acquisition opportunity. Quality stock is entering the market at better pricing, competition is falling, and rental demand per available unit is intensifying.
The 42% of landlords planning to sell at least one property in the next year are creating inventory for those who understand the structural fundamentals: the UK has a housing shortage, rental demand is rising, and professional landlords are now the backbone of local government finance accounting for over 50% of Stamp Duty receipts in half of England's local authorities.
The amateur landlord era is over. The professional investor era has begun.