The Cost of a Broken Model: Lease-Based Supported Housing
Ben Jenkins Ben Jenkins

The Cost of a Broken Model: Lease-Based Supported Housing

In recent years, lease-based Specialised Supported Housing (SSH) has quietly emerged as a fast-growing model in social housing — one that’s often framed as innovative, flexible, and responsive to the needs of vulnerable tenants. On paper, it offers a way to deliver housing for people with high care needs without the need for public sector capital outlay. Instead, private investors fund the homes, lease them to registered providers, and those providers, in turn, let them to tenants referred by local authorities.

But behind the scenes, this “asset-light” model comes with serious questions. Who’s really in control? What happens when the rent doesn’t cover the costs? And how much risk is being offloaded onto housing providers — and ultimately, the tenants themselves?

This isn’t just about spreadsheets or regulatory checklists. This is about homes — homes for people with complex needs, often vulnerable, sometimes voiceless. If the system propping up those homes is shaky, so too is the stability of the lives within them.

And that’s why this matters.

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UK Government's Social Housing Reforms: What You Need to Know
Ben Jenkins Ben Jenkins

UK Government's Social Housing Reforms: What You Need to Know

In August 2018, the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government published a green paper titled "A new deal for social housing," outlining five principles to create a new, fairer deal for social housing residents. The government's response to the call for evidence highlighted concerns about safety and quality, poor handling of complaints, and tenants feeling unheard. The government published a social housing white paper on 17 November 2020, which set out measures to reinforce the regulator's objectives, empower residents, and encourage investment in neighbourhoods. Although the white paper was generally well received, stakeholders expressed concerns over the pace of the proposed reforms, tenants' representation, and resource implications for social housing providers.

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