Sep 10

12 Steps To A Perfect Kitchen In A HMO

By Matthew Moody | HMOs

When you’re thinking of creating a HMO (Houses of Multiple Occupation), then you need to think very carefully about your kitchen.

You could have as few as five people sharing it right up to ten or more – depending on the size of your HMO!

Its essential that you have enough space for everybody to cook in comfort and here’s some guidelines that I’d recommend (outside of any essential guidelines required by HMO’s that are licenced):

  1. a double oven is essential – tenants often cook at the same times
  2. you need at least a four plate hob – anything less won’t really do
  3. you should provide a combination microwave oven so if your tenants decide not to cook microwave food, they can use another oven
  4. you need at least one fridge per three people (any more is fool-hardy both for your electric bill and for pandering to people; you can get a lot of ready-meals in a fridge drawer)
  5. you should really aim to provide a dish washer as it means that dishes do get washed and its a lot easier and probably more economical than washing by hand
  6. you should aim to have a big enough kitchen to have a table and chairs in to seat at least 2/3 of your tenants
  7. every tenant needs their own cupboard to store their food
  8. provide all the pots, pans, crockery, glasses, cutlery, tableware etc – it saves so much hassle and arguments over who owns what!
  9. try to provide one WOW factor in every kitchen.  For instance, we have a beautiful coffee machine in one, a large picture in another, a fantastic view from another – you get the picture
  10. provide all instruction booklets in a drawer thats easy to hand
  11. make sure you have fire blankets and fire extinquishers
  12. make sure you have your management noticeboard in the kitchen as everyone will read any notices you put on whilst they are cooking

At the very least, step into that kitchen and imagine yourself living there and make it a nice place for your tenant to live in.

Sep 09

HMO Regulations In A Nutshell

By Matthew Moody | HMO Regulations

I get asked this question ALL the time so thought I should really put down the laymans simple guide to what the HMO regulations mean for you.

Since the Housing Act of 2004, all HMO’s (Houses of Multiple Occupation) have fallen under the regulations of the act.

The regulations cover any investment property where two or more unrelated people share – so even if you have a 2-bed flat and you have 2 unrelated people sharing it; its technically a HMO.

However, the government are really interested in larger HMO’s where risks such as fire hazards, overcrowding, poor sanitary and conditions may prevail.  This being the case, the the standard of the regulations differs according to the type of HMO it is.

There’s also the confusion over occupants verses households.  An occupant is a person; a household is the family unit; i.e. there are four people that live in my house but only one household.  I have licences for properties where I can let to 6 households but up to 8 people (ie I could let to 2 couples if I wanted to).  You get the picture…


 Generally speaking, the high-risk HMO’s where there are more than 5 people sharing in a 3 storey or greater house is where the regulations will be tightest – and rightly so as these are the types of houses where fire safety needs to be highest.  These investment properties will be subject to mandatory licencing.So, how do you know whether your property falls under mandatory licencing or not?

  1. The regulations will generally only apply to houses as flats are unlikely to have the space or facilities for multiple-occupation (unless they are one of the new hybrid of student-flat developments springing up everywhere).
  2. The key criteria always asked is – is the house occupied by 5 or more people (including children) who are living as 2 or more households?
  3. The next criteria is – are amenities shared between households such as bathrooms, kitchens, toilets or showers?
  4. The final criteria asked – is the property 3 storeys (floors) in height?

Depending on your answers will depend on whether your property is classified as requiring a mandatory licence.  I’ve included a flow diagram below which shows the questions that you need to consider when purchasing a HMO as an investment property.

HMO Flow Chart 

So, what then happens if you have a property that is classified as a HMO and it needs licencing?

  1. You need to get in contact with your local council and speak to the HMO Licencing Team (depending on the council, this may be someone on the Environmental Health team) and get then to send you an Application Form for a House in Multiple Occupancy.
  2. The normal forms are about 30 pages long and go into a lot of detail – so you’ll need to set aside a couple of hours to complete this in full.  The form basically asks you a lot of information about the property, you and the managing agent (if you’re not managing it yourself).  I’m going to cover in another post how to fill out the form correctly.
  3. Send this off together with a large cheque of indeterminant amount (last time I checked, licence fees went from £300 right through to £1,500 per property across the country – although its the same amount of work every time!).
  4. The council will then get back in contact with you regarding any fire and safety regulations that you may need to adhere to.  Again, I’m going to cover these in more detail in another post but for now; suffice to say that any 3-storey property with 5 or more people in is generally going to need a BS5839:6 2004 Grade A fire system.  Sometimes a Grade B or Grade D system is allowed but this does depend on the fire officer, the level of risk presented and the structure of the building.
  5. You’re also going to have to have fire doors on all “hot” doors (basically anything that isn’t a bathroom) with intrumescant strips and closers.  That together with fire extinquishers in the kitchen will give you enough protection against any fires.

For a HMO that isn’t licenced, the same rules apply in terms of health and safety but you won’t be required to follow a prescribed set of instructions – this is something that you need to do yourself and be comfortable that the fire protection you are providing is adequate according to the regulations in place.

So, to sum up; if you have a 3 storey property with 5 or more people in, you will need to apply for a mandatory licence; if there are less people or less storeys that this; it will not be licenced but it will still be a HMO.

Please feel free to post some comments below if you have any further questions.

Sep 03

Is It Really HMO’s That Cause All The Rubbish?

By Matthew Moody | HMO Regulations

I read another interesting article yesterday about the so-called problems that HMO’s cause through over-flowing bins, waste tipped in alleys and fly-tipping in Oxford.  Council plot bin progress details the councils plans for a new £40,000 waste “hit-squad” to tackle these issues.

There were about 30 comments added to the articles, some agreeing, some disagreeing but the main assumptions seemed to be:

  • students have a lot of waste rubbish
  • students don’t pay council tax but they get council services
  • Oxford City provides fortnightly collections of rubbish
  • the streets of the city are very dirty – never mind the student areas
  • some businesses provide as much rubbish as students

When I read this, I was disapointed on two levels.

Read More

Sep 02

Can Student Lets Still Be Profitable?

By Matthew Moody | HMOs

I saw this great post yesterday about investing in student HMO’s which I think you should check out – Student Let Success

It details some of the same strategies that I teach for property investing but this time focusing on the student market.  One of the great things I’ve always found about the student market is whilst the yields are generally lower than I attain in my professional multi-lets; often the hassle is much less.

Why – surely most students are out partying, causing noise and damage and not treating your property with respect?  Well no, actually most students I’ve let to have been pretty courteous and have respected their property.  Of course, there’s usually lots of bottles, pizza boxes and dvd’s stacked about the place but that’s student living for you.

Once you’ve found your students for the year, most of the time; they’ll be there until the following summer meaning that you have some piece of mind in not having to continuously find tenants.  From a property investors point of view, thats one less thing to worry about.

The only other piece of advice I would offer on top of Hot Property’s article is to make sure that you contact the university or college in your town first to understand the market, the individual accreditation and rules they employ and get to know the local housing officer well – it will really help you in the long run.

So, if you’re interested in finding out a bit more about student investing, then take a look at Student Let Success and find out how to rent to students the easy way.

Aug 28

Latest Workshops Now Live For Booking

By Matthew Moody | Property Investing

Since the over-whelming response to my last workshop in July, we’re holding not one, but two HMO workshops in September!

I’ve also refreshed some content, added in a new section focused entirely on BILLS – how to manage them and keep them low – and for the month of September only – I’m offering a special added bonus of a FREE 30-minute consultation with me following the course to discuss your HMO business.

The workshops take place on:

September 13th 2008 – Milton Keynes

September 27th 2008 – Newcastle

To book and to get more information on exactly what we’ll be covering, please go to

www.hmocashflowsuccesssystem.com

Look forward to seeing you there

Aug 22

Creating Your Own Power Team To Achieve More

By Matthew Moody | Property Investing

Why do you need a team?

Because Property cannot be done on your own. 

Lets look at if you did it all on your own. 

Firstly you’d need to find a property, then you’d need to value it, then search around for the best mortgage, then process the legal paperwork, carry out all the searches, do the building work, find tenants, service the boilers, do the little odd jobs that crop up etc etc.  Sounds like a lot of hard work to me. Creating a team is paramount to your achieving more in property. 

As Robert Allen said in the 1 Minute Millionaire about teams expanding your business. There is one very important calculation to remember:  

1+1 = 11 not 2 

So what I suggest you do now, is go get some paper and a pen – and brainstorm everybody who you feel should be in your team. 

Once you’ve done this, then read on for my recommended list of 8 power players that NEED to be in your team!

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