Improve Social Housing Allocation and Management
Conservative · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Improve Social Housing Allocation and Management” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Affordable housing — Hurts
minor · moderate confidence
This policy restricts who can access social housing through residency tests and makes it easier to evict tenants for bad behaviour, but adds no new homes. Evidence suggests the restrictions could push vulnerable people into costly temporary accommodation without meaningfully changing who actually gets social housing.
The evidence
- The policy would introduce a Local Connection test and a UK Connection test for social housing allocation in England. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “legislate for new 'Local Connection' and 'UK Connection' tests for social housing in England to ensure fair allocation”
- The UK Connection test would require 10 years of lawful residence in the UK. — property118.com (media) — “The 'UK Connection' test would have required applicants to demonstrate 10 years of lawful residence in the UK”
- Already 89% of councils use local connection or residency tests, so the new Local Connection test adds little to existing practice. — housingtoday.co.uk (media) — “89% of councils already use local connection or residency tests”
- Already 90% of social lets in 2022-23 went to UK nationals, undermining the case for a new UK Connection test. — gov.uk (media) — “In 2022-23, 90% of social lets were allocated to UK nationals”
- Stakeholders raised significant concerns about implementation costs including additional staff and IT system updates. — gov.uk (media) — “Stakeholders raised "significant concerns" about the feasibility and cost of implementing a UK connection test, citing the need for additional staff, IT system updates, and new data verification checks”
- The proposals risked disproportionately harming protected groups including refugees and domestic violence victims. — gov.uk (media) — “the proposed policies risked "breakdowns in community cohesion" and could "disproportionately impact or discriminate based on race and against groups such as those with protected characteristics, refugees, and domestic v…”
- Existing local connection tests already create significant barriers for domestic abuse survivors who must flee their area. — dahalliance.org.uk (media) — “existing local connection tests create significant barriers for domestic abuse survivors who often must flee their local area for safety”
- Without exemptions, domestic abuse survivors are forced into unaffordable private rented tenancies, increasing homelessness risk. — refuge.org.uk (media) — “without exemptions, many are forced into unsuitable or unaffordable private rented tenancies, increasing their risk of homelessness”
- One million ASB incidents were reported to police in the year ending September 2023, and 26% of social housing residents were affected by ASB. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “in the year ending September 2023, 1 million ASB incidents were reported to the police, and 26% of social housing residents were affected by ASB in a 2022 government survey”
- Eviction for ASB may displace problems rather than solve them and have negative health impacts due to housing instability. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Eviction, while addressing immediate concerns, might displace problems and have negative health impacts due to housing instability”
- Court delays of up to a year for possession orders could undermine the three-strikes mechanism in practice. — socialhousing.co.uk (media) — “Landlords can face significant delays, sometimes waiting up to a year for possession orders, which can lead to an escalation of anti-social behaviour”
Biggest unknown: Whether exemptions (for domestic abuse survivors, care leavers, veterans) would be broad enough to prevent the worst harms to vulnerable groups, and whether courts would uphold three-strikes evictions at scale.
Our reading: Neither strand of this policy increases housing supply or improves affordability — the core drivers of O1. The connection tests are a rationing mechanism for existing stock, not a supply lever. The measurable baseline shows the problem the tests are meant to solve is already largely handled: 89% of councils already apply local connection rules, and 90% of social lets already go to UK nationals. Adding a 10-year lawful residence requirement at the margin risks pushing excluded applicants into temporary accommodation — which consultation evidence projects would be the likely outcome — at additional administrative cost and with disproportionate impact on domestic abuse survivors, refugees, and others with protected characteristics. The government's own consultation found these risks credible enough to reject the proposals. The three-strikes ASB eviction policy addresses a real problem — a quarter of social tenants experience ASB — but it does not add homes or reduce rents. It reduces security of tenure for those evicted, who may then enter the private rented sector or temporary accommodation, worsening their housing outcomes. Court delays and the burden of proof on victims further limit effectiveness in practice. On balance, the policy tightens access to and security within the social rented sector without expanding it, with credible evidence of harm to vulnerable groups and no supply or affordability benefit. The direction is a minor worsening of O1.
Crime, justice & national security — Little effect
minor · low confidence
The 'three strikes' ASB eviction policy targets a real problem — anti-social behaviour affects a quarter of social housing residents — but the policy is framed as an 'expectation' rather than a new legal power, existing eviction routes are already difficult and slow, and eviction may displace rather than resolve problems. The connection tests have little direct bearing on street safety or crime.
The evidence
- In the year ending September 2023, 1 million ASB incidents were reported to the police, and 26% of social housing residents were affected by ASB in a 2022 government survey. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “in the year ending September 2023, 1 million ASB incidents were reported to the police, and 26% of social housing residents were affected by ASB in a 2022 government survey”
- Experts note that evicting tenants for anti-social behaviour from social housing is very difficult, with a high bar set by the courts. — reddit.com (media) — “evicting tenants for anti-social behaviour from social housing is "VERY difficult," with a high bar set by the courts”
- Landlords can face significant delays, sometimes waiting up to a year for possession orders, which can lead to an escalation of anti-social behaviour. — socialhousing.co.uk (media) — “Landlords can face significant delays, sometimes waiting up to a year for possession orders, which can lead to an escalation of anti-social behaviour”
- Eviction, while addressing immediate concerns, might displace problems rather than eliminate them. — vertexaisearch.cloud.google.com (media) — “Eviction, while addressing immediate concerns, might displace problems and have negative health impacts due to housing instability”
- The LGA noted that many councils already have policies in place to address anti-social and criminal behaviour. — localgov.co.uk (media) — “many councils already have policies in place to address anti-social and criminal behaviour”
- There is disagreement on whether existing powers are sufficient or if new, tougher measures are necessary given the practical difficulties of eviction. — brabners.com (media) — “disagreement on whether existing powers are sufficient or if new, tougher measures are necessary given the practical difficulties of eviction”
Biggest unknown: Whether the policy would be backed by new statutory enforcement powers or court process reforms that actually speed up ASB evictions — without that, the 'expectation' changes little in practice.
Our reading: The policy's direct O5 relevance lies in the 'three strikes' ASB component. ASB in social housing is a genuine and substantial problem — a million incidents reported annually and a quarter of social housing residents affected. The policy points in the right direction for safety. However, three factors limit its real-world effect. First, it is framed as an 'expectation' on landlords, not a new statutory duty or reformed legal power; without procedural change, landlords face the same court system with the same delays of up to a year for possession orders. Second, many councils already operate similar policies, reducing the additionality of this measure. Third, credible evidence suggests that eviction may displace ASB rather than resolve it — perpetrators who lose social housing may cycle into less stable accommodation where monitoring and intervention are harder, potentially maintaining or worsening community safety outcomes elsewhere. The burden of proof on victims (collecting evidence across three incidents) also weakens the mechanism. The Local Connection and UK Connection tests have no plausible direct mechanism for reducing crime rates, charge/conviction times, or national security posture — they are housing allocation instruments scored more appropriately against O1. On balance, the ASB strand identifies a real gap but lacks the procedural teeth (court reform, resourcing, new legal grounds) for a population-scale safety effect. A minor improvement is conceivable if the 'expectation' shifts landlord behaviour at the margin, but the weight of evidence points to negligible net effect on O5 indicators absent complementary court and enforcement reforms.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Hurts
moderate · moderate confidence
The proposed UK Connection and Local Connection tests would create new legal barriers to social housing that consultation evidence found likely to fall disproportionately on people with protected characteristics, including refugees and domestic abuse survivors. The three-strikes eviction policy adds due-process concerns, given the open-ended definition of anti-social behaviour and severe consequences for tenants.
The evidence
- The policy would legislate for new Local Connection and UK Connection tests for social housing allocation. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “legislate for new 'Local Connection' and 'UK Connection' tests for social housing in England to ensure fair allocation”
- The UK Connection test would require applicants to demonstrate 10 years of lawful residence, with limited exemptions. — property118.com (media) — “The 'UK Connection' test would have required applicants to demonstrate 10 years of lawful residence in the UK, with exemptions for EEA, Swiss, and Irish citizens, and those on safe and legal resettlement routes”
- The Local Connection test proposed a minimum two-year connection to the local authority area, with councils able to set longer periods. — property118.com (media) — “The 'Local Connection' test suggested a minimum two-year connection to the local authority area, with councils able to set longer periods”
- Already 90% of social lets go to UK nationals, suggesting the problem the UK Connection test targets is already marginal. — gov.uk (media) — “In 2022-23, 90% of social lets were allocated to UK nationals”
- Consultation responses found the proposals risked discrimination on grounds of race and against refugees, domestic violence victims and others with protected characteristics. — gov.uk (media) — “the proposed policies risked "breakdowns in community cohesion" and could "disproportionately impact or discriminate based on race and against groups such as those with protected characteristics, refugees, and domestic v…”
- Existing local connection tests already create significant barriers for domestic abuse survivors who must flee their local area for safety. — dahalliance.org.uk (media) — “existing local connection tests create significant barriers for domestic abuse survivors who often must flee their local area for safety”
- The three-strikes proposal included potential disqualification from reapplying for social housing for up to five years for those with unspent ASB convictions or civil sanctions. — property118.com (media) — “proposals to disqualify applicants with unspent ASB convictions or civil sanctions for up to five years”
- The definition of nuisance or annoyance is open to interpretation, making consistent and fair application of the three-strikes policy difficult and raising due-process concerns. — socialhousing.co.uk (media) — “The definition of "nuisance or annoyance" can be open to interpretation, and judges must balance the community's need for safety with the tenant's right to housing, making discretionary evictions complex”
- Evidence burden falls on victims, who must collect proof of anti-social behaviour, creating asymmetric procedural fairness. — brabners.com (media) — “Victims of anti-social behaviour often bear the burden of collecting and providing evidence, which can negatively impact their mental well-being and personal security”
Biggest unknown: Whether statutory exemptions (e.g. for domestic abuse survivors, care leavers, veterans) would be wide or robust enough to neutralise the discriminatory effects identified in consultation responses.
Our reading: The policy's two components both raise O9 concerns around equal treatment and due process, though for different reasons. The UK Connection test is the more significant concern. Consultation evidence (E14) directly flags risk of disproportionate impact based on race and harm to refugees and those with protected characteristics. Given that 90% of social lets already go to UK nationals (E11), the test's practical effect would fall primarily on those outside that majority — a group the consultation found at heightened risk of discrimination. The domestic abuse dimension compounds this: existing local connection tests already disadvantage survivors who must flee their area (E15), and the proposed rules without robust exemptions would extend those barriers. While exemptions were proposed for some groups (E1), consultation evidence suggests they did not adequately cover the range of affected protected groups. The three-strikes ASB element raises real but secondary O9 concerns. The open-ended definition of 'nuisance or annoyance' (E30) means consistent, fair application is difficult. A five-year ban on reapplying (E20) is a severe consequence, and the evidential burden falls on victims rather than a neutral process (E27), creating procedural fairness risks. This is within O9's due-process scope. Taken together, both measures impose new legal disabilities that consultation evidence found likely to fall unevenly on already-disadvantaged or protected groups. The direction is 'worsens'; magnitude is moderate because these are structural allocation rules affecting a large programme — not marginal tweaks — though the legislation was never passed and exemptions could in principle have been widened.