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Second-home owners face Airbnb BAN as Michael Gove plans crackdown on holiday lettings to protect tenants living in tourist hotspots
- Second home owners could be banned from letting them out on hotel websites
- Michael Gove is drawing up proposal in the Levelling-Up and Regeneration Bill
- It would give powers to regional mayors to restrict short-term lets in hotspots
- Cornwall has just one per cent of UK population but 17 per cent of second homes
Second home owners could be barred from renting them out on hotel websites such as Airbnb, it has been revealed.
The move is being considered as part of a crackdown on short-term lets driving up house prices to unaffordable levels in areas popular with tourists.
Levelling-up Secretary Michael Gove is devising the plans, which would give powers to regional mayors to curb the numbers of people renting out holiday homes.
The proposal also contributes toward the government’s devolution programme granting more powers to local authorities, The Times reports.
The amendment to the Levelling-Up and Regeneration Bill would force anyone planning to rent out their home short-term to seek planning permission under change of use.
Bob Seely, Conservative MP for the Isle of Wight, said: ‘We have got to find a way of protecting communities and we are in the market for sensible ideas that can help.
‘Places like Devon, Cornwall, the Isle of Wight and the Lake District have lived too long with the problem of hollowed-out communities devoid of life apart from a few months of the year.
‘What we need is creative ideas to solve some of these problems.’

Levelling-up Secretary Michael Gove is devising the plans, which would give powers to regional mayors to curb the numbers of people renting out holiday homes


The amendment to the Levelling-Up and Regeneration Bill would force anyone planning to rent out their home short-term to seek planning permission under change of use (Pictured: Salcombe in Devon)


Locals in tourism hotspots such as the Lake District complain they are priced out of buying homes due to holiday lets (Pictured: Buttermere in the Lake District


Locals in Mevagissey voted by 90% to block second homes owners buying property in the village, where the average house price is £300,000
In January, the Scottish Parliament passed legislation allowing local authorities to set up a fee-paying registration scheme for owners to rent out properties on sites such as AirBnb. The same councils can also designate planning rules in areas, requiring change of use.
Last September, Cornwall Council revealed that almost 62% of a total £170million business support claimed by second home-owners during the pandemic went to landlords living outside the county
Liberal Democrat councillor Andrew George demanded the sums should be paid back by those using their Cornish homes as an ‘investment or leisure toy’.
Deputy leader of the council, David Harris, agreed – calling the benefit ‘just wrong and unfair’.
The same meeting heard 13,255 second homes were recorded on Cornwall Council’s council tax database with 11,081 holiday lets registered for business rates and 8,953 getting business rates relief.


Bob Seely, Tory MP for the Isle of Wight, said: ‘Places like Devon, Cornwall, the Isle of Wight and the Lake District have lived too long with the problem of hollowed-out communities devoid of life apart from a few months of the year’


Wealthy out-of-towners are drawn to Cornwall’s stunning scenery, leaving many locals feeling priced out


Data from Cornwall Council shows where the county’s 13,500 second homes were distributed in 2018
Statistics reveal that although Cornwall has just one percent of England’s population, it has 17 per cent of the country’s second homes.
Conservative MPs are warning that issue of second homes is now so prescient among their voters living in seaside and rural retreats, it could decide the party’s performance at the next general election.
While concerns over holiday homes driving up house prices have been widely reported for years, experts say a boom in online bookings for UK getaways after the pandemic has exacerbated the issue.
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