Regulated Rent in the Czech Republic - Is Your Property at Risk?
Regulated rent is a real issue in the post-communist countries
of Central and Eastern Europe. Its purpose has been to keep
accommodation affordable for all citizens but there are problems
that are arising.
Under regulated rent, a tenant is only obligated to pay a fixed
fee for the rent and this rate is not controlled by the actual
owner of the apartment or block of flats. It can only be passed
on through immediate family members and applies to that
particular apartment only. The tenant cannot move to a bigger
flat and still enjoy rent control unless they do this through
the underground regulated rent swapping market.
Yes, it exists and thrives in the Czech Republic.
Currently it is estimated that there are about 750 000 flats
under rent control in the Czech Republic. This is almost fully
one-fifth of occupied flats. Around 300 000 are privately owned
and the rest are owned by towns or villages.
Client Example
An example of how this affects landlords recently came to light
with a client from the US who is partial owner in a block of
flats in Prague. She is an absentee co-owner and asked us to
help advise her on matters pertaining to her property. She has a
tenant who enjoys regulated rent in a 1 + 1 (studio) flat in the
building. This tenant pays a mere 1 800 CZK/month when the
actual market value is at least 10 000 CZK/month. She had been
approached by the tenant offering to be bought out for 400 000
CZK so that she could move the apartment into the free market.
This is a common approach to getting apartments into the free
market but is quite costly as you can see. For this owner
however, there are two options. One is to take the payout. With
this decision she will get payback within 5 years considering
rental rate increases and the added value that her property has.
The other would be to wait for legislation to move the apartment
into the free market. Why is this an option?
European Court of Human Rights
Recent filings at the European Court of Human Rights in
Stasbourg have shown that owners are not happy with the
situation and the governments are going to be forced to revise
their laws sooner rather than later.
One complaint, lodged by the Association of Homeowners (OSMD),
involved a filing for compensation for the losses caused by rent
regulation in the 16 years since the fall of communism. As
reported in Czech Business Weekly, Libor Dellin, deputy chairman
of OSMD said that when the court decides in favor of the
property owners, each of them will require a minimum
compensation of 10 000 EURO (340 000 CZK).
Another homeowners association, the Movement for the Protection
of Property Owners (HOMR), has filed a similar complaint, hoping
to be awarded compensation from the state of up to 1.7 billion
EURO (50 billion CZK).
Why do they feel so confidently about their cases?
The Strasbourg court recently ruled in favor of a Polish
landlord who had accused the government of violating her human
rights by maintaining rent controls. The court ruled that the
government's action of regulating rents at the expense of
property owners was illegal and against human rights.
What is the Current News on Regulated Rent in Czech
Republic?
How have these developments and others affected the regulated
rent market in the Czech Republic?
A recent bill proposed by the Ministry for Regional Developments
(MMR) on June 14th suggests a gradual rent deregulation
beginning in October 2006.
The Minister of Regional Development, Radko Martinek, has
proposed that rents should, on an average, grow by 9.3% annually
to within 5% of the market value. He is suggesting this increase
should take place from October 2006 until 2012. Rents would
increase most in Prague and Brno but would not grow at all in
some areas like Zlin.
Recently proposed rental increases were 17% for Prague, 12% for
Brno and 2% for Ostrava. As of the writing of this article there
is discussion as to over what time period to implement these
changes.
Will all of these changes come to pass?
There is strong lobbying on both sides of the issue and time
will tell. Many are taking the opportunity to gamble on the
chance that these changes will come sooner rather than later and
are buying regulated rent apartments at the current below market
values.
If you have money to sit on and don't mind no return for the
short-term, it can be a very good investment. Many people have
done well in similar situations such as in the UK when it moved
from regulated rent some years back.
If I Purchase A Buy-to-Let Property in Czech Republic, Could
It Be Brought Under Rent Control?
No! You will know immediately if the property is currently under
rent control and the government cannot take a property they
don't own and move a rent control tenant into it.
If you find properties which are priced well below average, it
could be the reason why.