Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Dublin Live
Dublin Live
National
Ciara Phelan

Taoiseach Michael Martin slams soaring rents in the capital as 'not satisfactory'

Taoiseach Micheal Martin has blasted soaring rents in the country’s capital as “not satisfactory”.

He reacted to a recent reports showing average monthly rents in Dublin now at just under €2,000.

Rents for new tenancies rose by 9% nationally in the last three months of 2021 in comparison to 2020, new data from the Residential Tenancies Board and the ESRI shows.

Read more: Thousands of artists to get €325 per week under new Basic Income scheme

Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald grilled the Taoiseach saying his housing policy is failing and calling the rental crisis a “social catastrophe”.

She said: “The rent crisis is hammering a generation today, and robbing them of their aspirations for tomorrow for their future.

“This is not simply an urban crisis, rural Ireland fares no better.

“Counties like Donegal, Longford, Roscommon and Leitrim have all experienced massive jumps.”

The report shows rents in Roscommon increased by 25% in the fourth quarter of last year and rents in Waterford were up 24%.

Ms McDonald added: “In many, towns and villages there are no homes available to rent at all. So where are people supposed to live, Taoiseach?

“How can they hope to put a roof over their heads, build a decent life or raise a family if that’s what they wish to do?”

Ms McDonald also highlighted that the State is close to breaking the pre-Covid peak of 10,000 people who are homeless.

She called on Mr Martin to ban rent increases, give renters €1,500 in a tax rebate and to ramp up affordable housing in the Government’s Housing for All plan.

In response, Mr Martin said Covid-19 slowed down the construction of new housing.

He admitted the latest rental report was “very worrying” and “not satisfactory” but said it was related to “the supply issue”.

He denied that the Government’s Housing For All plan was not fit for purpose.

And he hit out at Sinn Fein’s housing policy saying: “Your tax credit would only add to the price of those rents, it would just be inflationary, there’s no guarantee at all that there would be a reduction of rents for new tenancies.

“You’re wrong in saying the Housing For All policy is not working, 35,000 commencements to March is the highest rolling 12 month average since 2008.

“So a lot of houses are being built now in the private sector, social housing, cost rental and
a number of other schemes.”

In the final quarter of 2021, rents for new tenancies in Dublin were €1,972 per month, compared to €1,104 per month outside Dublin, the report outlined. The highest average rent in new tenancies was in Dublin while the lowest monthly rents were in Leitrim, where the average stood at €740 per month.

The average annual cost to people renting in Dublin now stands at almost €24,000.

Social Democrats Housing spokesperson Cian O’Callaghan said renters in Dublin will pay €12,000 more in rent per annum than they did in 2011 – and that’s just the annual increase. He added: “For context, workers on the minimum wage – a paltry €10.50 per hour – earn just €21,840 in a year. How are workers on the minimum wage – and there are plenty of them – supposed to survive when average rental costs exceed their annual gross pay?

“The record of this government is clear – the crisis is getting worse.

“Unless it radically revises its housing plans, this deterioration will continue.”

Read more: Dublin rents growing fastest in the country and now cost over €2,000 per month

Read more: Ireland house prices: Cost of average Dublin home revealed

Sign up to the Dublin Live Newsletter to get all the latest Dublin news straight to your inbox.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.