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Ireland to regulate Airbnb rentals to tackle housing shortage

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Reuters DUBLIN

DUBLIN (Reuters) - Ireland will tackle a severe housing shortage in booming cities such as Dublin by regulating short-term lettings and home-sharing sites such as Airbnb, the country's housing minister said on Thursday.

Like many countries around the world, Ireland is grappling with the effect that the rising popularity of home sharing is having on tight housing supply, particularly the falling number of properties available for longer-term rental, a decade after the spectacular bursting of a housing bubble.

Although it was left with a surplus of houses after the 2008 property crash that slashed values in half, homes have become especially scarce as an economy and population that is growing faster than anywhere else in the EU fuels demand.

 

The new regulations, which are similar to those introduced this year in Toronto, will come into effect from June and aim to discourage professional landlords from withdrawing their properties from the long-term rental market in favour of short-term arrangements.

Other cities, including Berlin, Barcelona and Paris have also taken steps to limit the number of properties being used for short-term rentals, with the practice pushing up longer-term rents and pricing out locals.

"We want to protect...home sharing where someone might let a room in their home or indeed the entire house if they go away for a two-week holiday to pay the bills," Minister for Housing Eoghan Murphy told national broadcaster RTE on Thursday.

"But to end the practice where someone with a second home...might have taken that out (of the long-term rental market) because it's very profitable to do the short-term tourism letting."

Under the new regulations, second-homes cannot be used for short-term lettings unless already approved for short-term tourism letting by the local planning authority.

Owners of second homes can apply to planning authorities for a change of permitted use, but where demand for long-term lettings is high, they are unlikely to get permission.

Homeowners will be able to let their entire primary residence on a short-term basis for a maximum of 90 days in a year and up to 14 days at a time, and rent out a room within their home without restriction.

Just under 8,000 new homes were completed in Ireland in the first six months of the year, up 30 percent year-on-year but still set to fall well short of the 35,000 analysts say are needed annually just to keep up with demand.

(Reporting by Graham Fahy; Editing by Kirsten Donovan)

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First Published: Oct 25 2018 | 5:07 PM IST

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