Temporary accommodation has become one of the fastest-growing expenses within the UK housing system, with councils across England now spending approximately £2.8 billion annually. This figure has more than doubled over the past decade, reflecting the increasing financial burden placed on local authorities as they manage the consequences of housing shortages rather than investing in new housing supply.
The rising cost of temporary accommodation
Temporary accommodation is intended as a short-term solution for households qualifying for assistance under homelessness legislation. It includes a range of options such as bed and breakfast establishments, hotels, hostels, privately rented properties on short-term contracts, and nightly paid emergency placements. Many of these forms of accommodation are significantly more expensive than standard housing, contributing to the escalating costs faced by councils.
Recent data indicates that a substantial portion of council spending is absorbed by the most costly emergency accommodation types, including hotels and hostels. This not only places families in challenging living situations but also creates enormous financial pressure for local authorities attempting to balance their budgets.
Spending trends since 2016
Looking at the figures over recent years reveals a clear upward trajectory in spending on temporary accommodation:
| Year | Estimated spending on temporary accommodation | Context |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 | ~£1.2 billion | Rising pressure begins attracting wider attention |
| 2020 | ~£1.6 billion | Temporary accommodation use continues to grow |
| 2023 | ~£2.3 billion | Councils warn of escalating financial pressure |
| 2025 | ~£2.8 billion | Temporary accommodation becomes a major fiscal burden |
This significant increase highlights how temporary accommodation costs have become one of the most expensive consequences of housing shortages in Britain.
Housing pressure and temporary accommodation in Scotland
The pressures seen in England are mirrored in Scotland, where temporary accommodation use and public spending have also risen sharply. The following indicators illustrate this trend:
| Indicator | Mid-2010s | Latest figures |
|---|---|---|
| Private rented homes | ~370,000 | ~320,000 |
| Households in temporary accommodation | ~10,000 | 17,000+ |
| Children in temporary housing | ~6,000 | 10,000+ |
| Council spending on temporary accommodation | Rising | £100m+ annually in Scotland |
The data reveals a clear correlation: as housing pressures increase, so too do the numbers of households in temporary accommodation and the associated public expenditure.
London: the epicentre of temporary accommodation spending
London boroughs face some of the highest costs, with several councils spending over £100 million annually on temporary accommodation alone. This substantial expenditure diverts funds away from other core local services and underscores a systemic issue. Rather than investing in expanding housing supply, large sums of public money are being channelled into managing the fallout from housing shortages.
National implications and structural pressures
Temporary accommodation spending is not merely a local administrative challenge but a reflection of broader structural pressures across the UK housing system. Where housing supply fails to meet demand, the inevitable consequence is an increase in homelessness and reliance on costly emergency accommodation.
For example, Manchester City Council’s spending on temporary accommodation rose dramatically from approximately £2.25 million to nearly £13 million within five years. What once appeared to be a local anomaly has since become a national pattern, with councils across Britain experiencing similar trends of rising housing pressure, emergency placements, and escalating costs.
The deeper policy question
The growth in temporary accommodation spending highlights a fundamental issue: these costs represent the financial burden of housing shortages after they have occurred. Expanding housing supply reduces the need for emergency accommodation, while supply constraints lead to longer waiting lists, increased homelessness, and higher temporary accommodation budgets.
Over the past decade, various housing policies have been introduced across Britain, including changes to landlord taxation, regulatory reforms in the private rented sector, rent regulation experiments, and ambitious housebuilding targets. Yet, councils continue to spend billions annually on temporary accommodation. This raises a critical question: are current housing policies effectively increasing supply, or are they merely raising the cost of managing housing shortages?
Source: Based on reporting from Property118
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Source: www.property118.com