Right to Buy sales and replacements, England: April 2024 to March 2025
Published 21 August 2025
Applies to England
This release reports on the sales of council owned dwellings which are subject to the Right to Buy pooling of receipts provision. While a large proportion of these sales are Right to Buy, some are shared ownership sales and other eligible sales. Prior to the 2021-22 annual release, it was not possible to separate these types of sales, and these total sales will be referred to as “eligible sales” throughout this release.
The quarterly figures presented in earlier releases also refer to “eligible sales”. The latest statistics on all Right to Buy sales was published in the 2023-24 Social Housing Sales and Demolitions statistical release. The latest figures for sales of social housing are reflected in Table 678.
Release date: 21 August 2025
Lead Statistician: Samuel Pitch
Statistical queries: housing.statistics@communities.gov.uk
Media enquiries: 0303 444 1209 or NewsDesk@communities.gov.uk
1. Key statistics
2,036,848
Since the start of the Right to Buy scheme in 1980, until 31 March 2025, there have been over 2,036,848 sales to tenants through the Right to Buy scheme. [footnote 1]
7,494
In 2024-25, Local Authorities reported 7,494 eligible sales, an increase of 7% compared to 2023-24.[footnote 2]
£798 million
From these 7,494 sales, Local Authorities received £798 million.
£106,500
The average receipt per dwelling was £106,500, an increase of 8% compared to 2023-24.
3,593
3,593 replacements were funded in 2024-25 through receipts from eligible sales, an increase of 4% compared with 2023-24. Of these, Local Authorities started or acquired 3,548 properties and Homes England or the Greater London Authority started or acquired 45 properties.[footnote 3]
2. Comparison of eligible sales to total Right to Buy sales
This statistical release, and the accompanying tables, report data submitted by Local Authorities to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) reporting:
-
the number of eligible sales of social houses to Local Authority tenants
-
the receipts collected through these sales
-
the number of properties started, completed and acquired funded through these receipts
The data submitted by Local Authorities forms part of the Pooling of Capital Receipts return which is used to calculate the amount of money which Local Authorities must pay to central government from the proceeds of eligible sales. The data collected for this release is financial information based on rules regarding the pooling of receipts which were created following the reinvigoration of the Right to Buy scheme in April 2012. This means that the sales reported in these statistics are mainly Right to Buy sales, but also include a small number of shared ownership sales and other discounted sales to secure tenants. Right to Buy sales of properties built after July 2008 are excluded from these statistics as they are excluded from the provisions in the pooling regulations relating to Right to Buy sales.
This statistical release should be seen as the leading indicator of Right to Buy sales, as the statistics in the scope of this release do not include all Right to Buy sales and also include a small number of other sales. The definitive statistics on the overall number of Right to Buy sales is the Social Housing Sales and Demolitions statistics which will be released in January/February 2026.
At a national level, eligible sales can be used to approximate Local Authority Right to Buy sales, particularly for describing trends. However, when quoting exact figures for individual Local Authorities, the correct source of this information is the Social Housing Sales and Demolitions statistics.
3. Eligible sales
3.1 Eligible sales by type
Of the 7,494 reported eligible sales in 2024-25, 7,278 were Right to Buy, 44 were shared ownership and 1 was classed as other eligible sales. There is no sale type information on the remaining sales. This shows that while Right to Buy sales do not make up 100% of all eligible sales, they account for over 99% where the type of sale is known, therefore changes to the Right to Buy scheme have an obvious and direct impact to the number of eligible sales. 2021-22 was the first year that information on the type of eligible sales was collected.
3.2 Eligible sales in 2024-25
In 2024-25, there were 7,494 reported eligible sales of Local Authority properties to tenants. At the time of last year’s release, there was a higher than usual non-response for 2023-24 data. Since then, most of those have now responded and a number of others have revised their figures. As a result, the current number of sales for 2023-24 is considerably higher in this release compared to what was presented at the time.
The 7,494 reported eligible sales were an increase of 7% compared to 2023-24. The graph below shows how the number of eligible sales has changed since 2006-07 in England.
Figure 1: Annual eligible sales from 2006-07 to 2024-25, England
Eligible sales decreased between the years ending March 2007 and March 2009, following the introduction of caps on discounts in 2005. Sales began to rise again after reinvigoration in April 2012 (when discounts to tenants increased) and continued to do so when in March 2013 there were further increases to the discounts in London.
From the year ending March 2017, there was a downward trend in the number of eligible sales. There was a particularly sharp decline in 2020-21 due to the restrictions introduced as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Sales reported in 2023-24 fell sharply before increasing slightly in 2024-25. Sales are still well below the peak in 2016-17 and well above the levels in 2011-12 (the last year before the reinvigoration of Right to Buy).
3.3 Eligible sales by region
Eligible sales were concentrated across a small group of Local Authorities. In 2024-25, approximately 50% of the total number of sales were made by 21 Local Authorities, all of which were urban centres, including two London boroughs. This distribution has been similar in previous years.
Across the regions of England there is a large variation in the number of Local Authority properties bought through Right to Buy. This variation is due to a series of differences across the regions:
-
amount of Local Authority social housing stock: in some regions there is a much larger proportion of social housing which is owned by private registered providers compared to Local Authorities, reducing the number of possible sales compared to other regions
-
maximum Right to Buy discounts: Right to Buy sales in London had a higher maximum discount until November 2024 (£136,400 for the period between April and November 2024) compared to the other English regions (£102,400 in the same period), however, discounts were lowered to pre-2012 levels after that date
-
house prices: there is a large variation in house prices across the regions of England which means that Right to Buy is more affordable in some areas than others
As can be seen from the graph below, in 2024-25 the most eligible sales were seen in Yorkshire and the Humber, London, and the Midlands. These regions have also had the most eligible sales since 2012, with sales in London showing a significant spike after 2013-14 following increases to the discounts available in London in April 2013.
Figure 2: Annual eligible sales by Region in England, 2012-13 to 2024-25
On 31 March 2024 there were 1,562,000 Local Authority owned social homes held within a Housing Revenue Account [footnote 4], which were unevenly distributed across the regions of England. As the number of Local Authority owned social homes has a direct impact on the number of Right to Buy sales, the graph below reports the number of sales per 1,000 Local Authority stock at the end of the previous year.
Figure 3: Annual eligible sales per 1,000 Local Authority stock held in a housing revenue account by region in England, 2012-13 to 2024-25
This graph shows that the number of eligible sales per 1,000 stock was highest in the North East, the Midlands, Yorkshire and the Humber, and the North West. It shows that the number of sales in London per 1,000 stock have declined since a peak in 2014-15 to be, on average, among the lowest per 1,000 stock owned in all regions since 2017-18.
4. Eligible sales receipts
In 2024-25, Local Authorities received £798 million through reported eligible sales, an increase of 16% compared to 2023-24. The average receipt in 2024-25 was £106,500, an increase of 8% compared to 2023-24 and a slight increase compared to the previous peak in 2022-23.
The dark blue line on the graph below shows the total value of receipts received in England through eligible sales since 2012-13, with the turquoise line showing the average receipt against the right-hand side y-axis.
Figure 4: Total value of receipts and average receipts received through eligible sales, England 2012-13 to 2024-25
As can be seen from the figure above, the average receipt from eligible sales in England has gone up from £61,800 in 2012-13 to £106,500 in 2024-25, an increase of 72%. Whereas the average house price for England[footnote 5] over the same period increased by 78%, indicating that receipts from Right to Buy sales have increased at a slightly slower pace than the wider housing market.
The receipts received by Local Authorities are dependent on the location and type of properties sold, the number of years that tenants have been living at the property and the change in house prices over the course of the year. For these reasons it is difficult to identify a single factor as to why average receipts in different regions change over a time period.
The graph below shows the average receipt in each region since 2012-13 and the figure in blue represents the percentage change from 2023-24 to 2024-25. In recent years, London consistently has the highest average receipt. In all regions, the average receipt increased from 2023-24 to 2024-25, with the largest increase observed in the East of England.
Figure 5: Average receipt received through eligible sales, by region in England 2012-13 to 2024-25
The receipts gained from the eligible sales of social housing properties must be spent by Local Authorities within 5 years [footnote 6] on the replacement of properties which have been sold either through building new homes or acquiring existing properties. If the receipts are not spent in this time period, then they are returned to the department to be spent by Homes England or the Greater London Authority on providing new homes, either by new build or acquisition of existing stock (including new build in open market). There is more information on the replacement of eligible sales in the Background to the Right to Buy scheme section.
In March 2023, it was announced that councils would be able to retain 100% of the receipts from Right to Buy sales in 2022-23 and 2023-24.
5. Replacements using Right to Buy receipts
5.1 Starts and acquisitions
Since the reinvigoration of Right to Buy in April 2012, MHCLG has collected data on the number of properties which have been started or acquired using the receipts of Right to Buy sales. Both starts on site for new builds, as well as acquisitions of properties from the market, count towards a Local Authority’s total for Right to Buy replacements.
In 2024-25, there were 3,593 properties started or acquired using Right to Buy receipts, an increase of 4% compared to 2023-24.[footnote 3]
In 2022-23, a 50% cap was introduced on the use of Right to Buy receipts for acquisitions to help encourage new housing supply, and in March 2023 it was announced that this cap had been frozen at 50% until 2025. This cap did not apply to the first 20 units acquired. This meant that in Local Authorities where there had been more than 20 replacements funded using Right to Buy receipts in the financial year, the number of acquisitions to which the cap applied [footnote 7] could not exceed half of their total replacement number plus ten.
In July 2024, this 50% cap on the number of replacements that could be delivered as acquisitions each year was removed. Initially, it was announced that the cap would be removed for 2024-25 and 2025-26 only, however, in July 2025, it was confirmed that the suspension of the cap would be extended indefinitely.
Data on the split between starts and acquisitions was first collected in 2017-18 and since then, although the split has varied, the majority of replacements every year have been starts, accounting for between 51% and 68% of all replacements each year up to and including 2023-24. However, in 2024-25, there was a reversal of this split with 40% of all replacements being starts on site and 60% being acquisitions, likely due to the removal of the acquisition cap.
The graph below shows the number of replacements delivered by Local Authorities, Homes England and the GLA using Right to Buy receipts since 2012. It shows that the number of starts and acquisitions continued to increase from 2012-13 to reach a peak in 2020-21. Since 2012-13, the majority of replacements have been delivered by Local Authorities themselves, accounting for 47,819 (93%) of the 51,643 total replacements. From 2023-24, Homes England is not separately recording new starts funded with Right to Buy receipts. Therefore this number may be an undercount of the total number of replacements. Replacements funded via the Greater London Authority are still included for 2023-24 onwards. In 2024-25, the number of reported replacements increased by 4% compared with the figure in 2023-24.
Figure 6: Total replacements started and acquired by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority, 2012-13 to 2024-25
There are several factors that may have had an impact on the number of starts since 2022-23 including difficulties sourcing raw materials, rising build costs and high inflation. Additionally, in April 2021, the time limit for Local Authorities to spend new and existing Right to Buy receipts was extended from 3 years to 5 years. This may have led to Local Authorities choosing to spread out the spending of the same money across a longer period of time, leading to a reduction in the number of replacements in the short term.
The number of replacements is calculated from the sum of starts and acquisitions. This is measured against the one-for-one replacement target, in which every additional Right to Buy sale since the reinvigoration in 2012, above a 2010-based baseline, must be replaced by a new affordable home nationally within 3 years.
The baseline predicted that without the reinvigoration there would be 37,732 Right to Buy sales between 1 April 2012 and 31 March 2022. The actual number of sales in that period was 107,118. This means that the replacement target was 69,386. During the period 1 April 2012 to 31 March 2025 there were 51,643 actual replacements, which means there were 17,743 fewer replacements than the replacement target.
The graph below shows the cumulative number of replacements delivered by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority by year against the replacement target in each year.[footnote 3] This target hasn’t been met since 2017-18, and the gap between actual replacements and the target grew every year since, except for 2023-24. The one-for-one replacement target is for a England level replacement within 3 years. The change in trend seen in 2023-24 is therefore a direct result of the drop in eligible sales seen in 2020-21, which coincided with restrictions introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
Figure 7: Cumulative replacements started and acquired versus the one-for-one replacement target, 2012-13 to 2024-25
5.2 Replacements by region
The delivery of replacements was concentrated across a small group of Local Authorities, as was also the case in previous years. In 2024-25, approximately 50% of the total number of replacements were delivered by 15 Local Authorities, most of which were urban centres, including four London boroughs, and 2 of which were majority rural areas (South Cambridgeshire and Cornwall).
Across the different English regions in 2024-25 compared to the previous year, there were falls in replacements occurred across the East of England, London and the South West, with increases in the North East, the South East and Yorkshire and the Humber, and the remainder of regions, the North West, East Midlands and West Midlands, remaining broadly similar.
Historically, as with eligible sales, the number of replacements has a large regional variation across England. Most of the replacements have been in London, the South East and the East of England, with comparatively fewer in the North East and North West.
The figure below shows the total number of replacements delivered by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority across the 9 English regions.
Figure 8: Total replacements delivered by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority, by English region, 2012-13 to 2024-25
5.3 Completions
Following changes to the data collection from 2021-22, statistics on the number of properties funded through Right to Buy receipts which have been completed and that count towards the one-for-one replacement target are presented in this release. Between 2012-13 and 2020-21, these data were collected in the Local Authority Housing Statistics. Due to the different collections, comparison of the figures from 2021-22 onwards with the figures from 2020-21 and earlier should be done with care, as some variations may be due to differences in the data collection and methodology and may not reflect actual changes.
In 2024-25 there were 2,115 reported completions of new-build replacement properties, a decrease of 7% compared to 2023-24. Of these new-build completions, 1,934 were completed by Local Authorities. The remaining 181 new-build completions were delivered by Homes England and the Greater London Authority. Of these, 133 were completed by Homes England, and 48 by the Greater London Authority.
The graph below shows the total number of new-build completions reported by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority since 2012-13.
Figure 9: Total new-build replacements completed by Local Authorities, Homes England and the Greater London Authority, 2012-13 to 2024-25
The graph below shows the comparison between starts and completions of new build properties by Local Authorities. Before 2017-18 there is no data available on starts, but a combined figure for starts and acquisitions (replacements) is available. The “Estimated Starts” figures for before 2017-18 in the graph below are calculated by taking the proportion of replacements which were starts between 2017-18 and 2023-24 and applying this to total replacements figures from 2012-13 to 2016-17 to estimate the number of starts.
Figure 10: Comparison between starts and completions of new build properties by Local Authorities, 2012-13 to 2024-25
Numbers of completions follow a similar trend, although with a lower absolute value, to those of starts but with an up to two-year delay. This is expected because it takes approximately 2 years for a property to move from a start to a completion.
The decrease in completions in 2019-20 and 2020-21 may be due to the restrictions introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, while the increase in completions in 2021-22 may be a result of a catch up of new builds not completing until restrictions eased. The decrease in completions since 2022-23 is expected due to the decrease in starts since 2019-20.
5.4 Types of replacement
Data has recently been collected on the types of replacement that Local Authorities have delivered. For these breakdowns, replacements are defined as acquisitions plus completions, different to the definition of acquisitions plus starts which is used to measure 1-4-1 replacement following Right to Buy sales.
Tenure
From 2021-22, data has been collected on the tenure of replacement dwellings (acquisitions and completions) delivered by Local Authorities. Data is also collected by Homes England and the Greater London Authority on the tenures of completed and acquired properties funded by the recycling of Right to Buy receipts. In order to match between data sources, homes delivered by the Greater London Authority as London Affordable Rent have been combined in the Affordable Rent figures.
In 2024-25, 41% (1,743) of replacement properties were for Social Rent, 56% (2,415) were for Affordable Rent, 3% (121) were for Shared Ownership, and less than 0.1% had an unknown tenure. Although absolute values have fluctuated slightly since data on the tenure of replacements started being collected, the percentage of each tenure has remained broadly similar year on year, particularly when comparing the figures for 2024-25 to those for 2023-24. To date, no First Homes replacements have been recorded using recycled Right to Buy receipts.
The graph below shows the number of replacement properties for each tenure by year since 2021-22.
Figure 11: Right to Buy replacements (new-build completions and acquisitions) by tenure, 2021-22 to 2024-25
The pooling return on which these statistics are based does not itself collect data on the tenure of the properties sold. However, Local Authority Housing Statistics data shows that Local Authority housing stock held within a Housing Revenue Account is primarily social rent (98%),[footnote 8] 98% of all sales of Local Authority rental stock are of social rent dwellings,[footnote 9] and 99% of all sales of Local Authority rental stock are Right to Buy sales.[footnote 10] It can therefore be inferred that the majority of eligible sales are of social rent dwellings.
Bedrooms
The Local Authority Housing Statistics collects data on the number of bedrooms of properties sold through Right to Buy and, from 2012-13 to 2020-21, also on the number of bedrooms of the replacement properties (acquisitions and completions). The information on replacement properties was moved to the Capital Receipts of Pooling Return in 2021-22. Replacements by numbers of bedrooms are not available from Homes England or the Greater London Authority, so the following statistics only apply to replacements delivered by Local Authorities.
On average, homes sold through Right to Buy are being replaced by homes with fewer bedrooms. Between 2012-13 and 2023-24,[footnote 11] 14% of Right to Buy sales were 1-bedroom properties, 33% had 2 bedrooms and 53% had 3 or more bedrooms. For acquisitions and completions between 2012-13 and 2024-25, 25% of these were 1-bedroom properties, 43% had 2 bedrooms and 32% had 3 or more bedrooms.
The graph below shows the comparison between sales, from 2012-13 to 2023-24, and completions and acquisitions (replacements), from 2012-13 to 2024-25, by number of bedrooms for England.
Figure 12: Comparison between Right to Buy sales, from 2012-13 to 2023-24, and replacement completions and acquisitions, from 2012-13 to 2024-25, by number of bedrooms for England
The graph below shows the comparison between sales, from 2012-13 to 2023-24, and completions and acquisitions (replacements), from 2012-13 to 2024-25, by number of bedrooms by region of England.
Figure 13: Comparison between Right to Buy sales, from 2012-13 to 2023-24, and replacement completions and acquisitions, from 2012-13 to 2024-25, by number of bedrooms by English region
The figure above shows that there was a higher proportion of 1- and 2-bedroom homes acquired or completed compared to those sold in all regions except for London and the North West.
6. Background to the Right to Buy scheme
The Right to Buy scheme was introduced in 1980 and gives qualifying social tenants the opportunity to buy their rented home at a discount.
The scheme is open to secure tenants of Local Authorities and non-charitable PRPs, and to those assured tenants of PRPs who transferred with their homes from a Local Authority as part of a stock transfer. To qualify for the Right to Buy scheme, a social tenant must have accrued at least three years public sector tenancy. This does not need to be continuous, nor does it need to have been accrued whilst living in the tenant’s current property.
In 1998 and 2003, Discount Orders reduced Right to Buy discounts across England to maximums ranging from £16,000 to £38,000 (depending on the Local Authority where the property was located). Prior to that, the discount cap had been £50,000 across England.
In April 2012, the Department for Communities and Local Government (DCLG) reinvigorated the Right to Buy scheme by changing the maximum cash discount available for Right to Buy sales to a new higher level of £75,000 across England. In March 2013, in recognition of the increasing property prices in London, the Government further increased the maximum discount available for tenants living in London boroughs to £100,000. In July 2014, DCLG changed the maximum cash discount available for the Right to Buy so that it changes annually in line with the Consumer Price Index (CPI) rate of inflation.
The maximum cash discount in 2024-25 for applications received by the 20 November was £136,400 in London and £102,400 in the rest of England. Following the Government’s review of Right to Buy discounts, which was published alongside the Autumn Budget 2024, maximum cash discounts returned from 21 November to the pre-2012 levels, of between £16,000 to £38,000, depending on the location.
From 2012, Local Authorities have been able to keep the receipts from additional sales (sales which are above a baseline taken from before the reinvigoration in 2010-11). In 2012 a new target was introduced that, nationally, every additional property sold through Right to Buy would be replaced by a new affordable home for rent under the one-for-one replacement policy. Between 2011-12 and 2020-21, Local Authorities were given 3 years to spend these receipts to fund up to 30% of each replacement home. If they chose not to/were not able to do so, the receipts were returned to the Department to fund replacements through Homes England or the Greater London Authority.
On 20 March 2021, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) published its response to a consultation on the use of Right to Buy (RTB) receipts which outlined some changes to how Local Authorities could spend the money they received from Right to Buy sales. These changes gave Local Authorities increased flexibility on how they could spend their receipts to help authorities build more homes.
In summary, the changes included:
-
extending the time Local Authorities had to spend new and existing Right to Buy receipts from 3 years to 5 years. This was intended to make it easier for Local Authorities to undertake longer-term planning, including remediation of larger plots of land
-
increasing the percentage cost of a new home that Local Authorities could fund using Right to Buy receipts from 30% to 40%. This aimed to make it easier for authorities to fund replacement homes using Right to Buy receipts, as well as to build homes for social rent
-
introducing a cap on the use of Right to Buy receipts for acquisitions to help drive new supply with effect from 1 April 2022, and phased in over 2022-23 to 2024-25
-
allowing receipts to be used for shared ownership and First Homes, as well as housing at affordable and social rent, to help Local Authorities build the types of home most needed in their communities
These changes took effect from 1 April 2021, except for the acquisition cap, which was introduced from 1 April 2022, on a phased basis.
In March 2023, it was announced that councils would be able to retain 100% of the receipts from Right to Buy sales in 2022-23 and 2023-24 to help deliver more replacement homes. The acquisition cap was also frozen at 50% until 2025, at which point it would drop to 40% for 2025-26, and then 30% from 2026-27.
In July 2024, it was announced that the Government was removing the caps on the percentage of replacements delivered as acquisitions and the percentage cost of a replacement home that can be funded using Right to Buy receipts, and councils would also be given the ability to combine Right to Buy receipts with section 106 contributions. These flexibilities would be in place for an initial 24 months, and subject to review.
At the Autumn Budget 2024, it was announced that councils would be able to retain 100% of the receipts from Right to Buy sales indefinitely. The government also increased the protections on newly built social homes by increasing the cost floor protection period from 15 to 30 years from 21 November 2024. The cost floor limits the discount on Right to Buy properties to ensure that the purchase price of the property does not fall below what has been spent on building, buying, repairing or maintaining it over a certain period of time.
7. Definitions
-
Right to Buy: The sale of a Local Authority-owned property to a secure tenant of more than 3 years at a discounted price.
-
Preserved Right to Buy: A scheme which allows tenants of properties which were initially owned by a Local Authority, but then transferred to a Private Registered Provider (PRP), to maintain their statutory Right to Buy.
-
Voluntary Right to Buy: A pilot scheme in the Midlands which ran from 2018 to 2021 which gave an option for PRPs to sell properties to tenants on a voluntary basis, at the same discounts at statutory Right to Buy.
-
Additional receipts: Receipts generated by additional sales resulting from the 2012 Right to Buy discount increases (against a baseline of sales forecast before the increases) that can be retained by Local Authorities to fund replacement homes.
-
Pooling: The process of managing Right to Buy receipts nationally, and specifically the process of calculating and collecting the amount of these receipts that should be returned to MHCLG.
8. Live tables
See the data tables which accompany this release.
-
Live Table 691 Annual: Right to Buy sales, by Local Authority
-
Live Table 692 Annual: Right to Buy receipts, by Local Authority
-
Live Table 693 Annual: Replacements of Right to Buy sales, by Local Authority
-
Right to Buy sales open data
-
Right to Buy replacement open data
9. Technical notes
Please see the accompanying technical notes document for further details.
10. Enquiries
Media enquiries:
Office hours: 0303 444 1209
Email: NewsDesk@communities.gov.uk
Public enquiries:
Email: housing.statistics@communities.gov.uk
Information on Official Statistics is available via the UK Statistics Authority website.
Information about statistics at MHCLG is available via the Department’s website.
11. Next release
The date of the next release is pre-announced on GOV.UK.
-
This figure includes all Right to Buy sales, including voluntary and preserved Right to Buy sales to Private Registered Provider tenants, Local Authority Right to Buy sales up to March 2024, plus all Local Authority eligible sales from April 2024 to March 2025 which were Right to Buy. Non-eligible Local Authority Right to Buy sales, eligible sales that are not Right to Buy sales, and Private Registered Provider Right to Buy sales for the financial year 2024-25 are not included in this figure. ↩
-
At the time of last year’s release, there was a higher than usual non-response for 2023-24 data. Since then, most of those have now responded and a number of others have revised their figures. As a result, the current number of sales for 2023-24 is considerably higher in this release compared to what was presented at the time. ↩
-
From 2023-24, Homes England is not separately recording new starts funded with Right to Buy receipts. Therefore this number may be an undercount of the total number of replacements. Replacements funded via the Greater London Authority are still included for 2023-24 onwards. ↩ ↩2 ↩3
-
Data from Local Authority Housing Statistics. ↩
-
Data from Land Registry, calculated by working out the percentage increase of average house prices in England from April 2012 to March 2025. UK House Price Index ↩
-
From 2017-2018, this increased from 3 years to 5 years. ↩
-
Some types of acquisitions which still resulted in the authority contributing to net supply were exempt from the cap. Acquisitions of new build from a Local Authority’s own housing company or arms length management organisation (ALMO) or from regeneration projects that contributed to net supply were exempt. Acquisitions of new build from a private developer were not exempt. ↩
-
Local Authority Housing Statistics, stock at 31 March 2024. The proportion of stock that is social rent is calculated by dividing the number of Social Rent dwellings owned by Local Authorities with a housing revenue account (a2iaa) by the total number of dwellings owned by those Local Authorities (a2ia). ↩
-
Local Authority Housing Statistics, sales during 2023-24. The proportion of sales that are of social rent dwelling is calculated by dividing the number of sales of social rent properties (k1fa) by the total sales of rental stock (k1ff). ↩
-
Calculated from Live Table 678 using Local Authority Right to Buy sales, divided by the sum of Local Authority Right to Buy sales, other sales to sitting tenants by Local Authorities, and other sales by Local Authorities. ↩
-
Data for 2024-25 will be available alongside the publication of the 2024-25 Social Housing sales and demolitions statistical release in January/February 2026. ↩