An investigation by the BBC and Zoopla shows the sharp drop in the volume of available rental units in the past 18 months.
Lettings agencies typically have 10 rentals compared to over 16 before September 2021, according to figures shared with the BBC by Zoopla.
It suggests that the number of rental properties UK hasn't actually fallen but has remained roughly static since 2016 - but demand for rented accommodation has risen to more than 50 per cent above normal levels, Zoopla's figures show.
The portal draws its information from listings on its website, which cover 85 per cent of UK properties listed for rent. Existing tenants, aware of the shortage, choose not to move, the portal says.
"We've seen a big increase in demand for rented housing from record high immigration, the economy reopening [after the pandemic]" states Richard Donnell, executive director for research at Zoopla.
"But at the same time, we just haven't seen much new investment by landlords in rented housing. And that's creating a real crunch in availability."
Higher mortgage rates, tax changes and new regulations for rented properties have made it less profitable for landlords to buy houses and offer them for rent.
The BBC investigation says large numbers of landlords are leaving the market - 11 per cent of homes for sale on Zoopla were previously rented. For others, short-term lets such holiday lets or Airbnb offer better returns than long-term tenants. Zoopla has seen a three-fold increase in short-term lets since 2019.
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So this is just telling us what we've all known and complained about for the last couple of years.
This is straightforward economics and not unsurprisingly a case of supply vs demand. Granted differing areas of the country will be in different stages of the property cycle but mostly in the expansion phase which is great for landlords and not so great for tenants.
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