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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Surprised with the quality of some council houses

427 replies

LydieL · 01/05/2025 18:58

Hi all, so I recently moved to a town in the north west, very low income area, the town is as you’d expect a sea of terrace houses that open to the street with concrete yards, some of the nicer parts have gardens but for the most part that’s not the case. There are also some newer estates.

Anyway I work for a charity, we support families where a parent or sibling has passed away. As part of my job I’ve seen a lot of council houses, in this area it’s mostly the terraces which are small or post war builds which are bigger but these tend to be “rougher” areas to live.

Lately I’ve been working with a family, mums been offered a council house and today I went with her to just go over a list of what she needs to do to get out of temporary accommodation asap and into it. I’ll be honest I’m a little stunned at the quality, it’s a 3 bed terrace, small front garden, mid size back garden (more than most around here), large kitchen, bay window. Council have fitted a new kitchen and bathroom and re-plastered the whole house.

It’s also in a “nicer” area. For the amount this place would sell for, you could probably buy 2 cheaper 3 bed terraces and considering the shortage of council housing stock I’m surprised that hasn’t happened! She will be paying about a little Over half what it would go for on the rental market.

Now I know this is the exception rather than the norm but AIBU to be surprised councils are holding onto higher value properties like this rather than selling them and either getting 2 houses (so 2 families can be housed) or putting the profit into the local area?

I am aware this is far from the norm but after talking to colleagues the council seems to have several properties in this little area, this mum has also got very lucky with her housing situation as she’s only been in temporary accommodation for a couple of months.

OP posts:
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CleverButScatty · 11/05/2025 19:41

LydieL · 01/05/2025 19:33

Okay I appreciate that my tone may have been read wrong.
Perhaps I am jealous, having looked at sold prices in this area we couldn’t have afforded to buy here or a house like this when we moved.

I do fully believe that everyone is entitled to a nice home but that implies there is something wrong with the alternatives, there isn’t, we live in one of those!

I think it’s also a hard pill to swallow when someone who hasn’t been in the UK for years (she is a British citizen but left shortly after graduating, so hasn’t contributed to the economy at all) returns, gets given a beautiful property, hand outs of every flavour etc.

I appreciate how difficult things have been for this family and her children to lose their dad and move to a country they hadn’t step foot in before.
Im also aware that I’m out here working for a seemingly Lowe quality of life than what this mum will receive having contributed nothing and just hoping on a plane when the country she moved to was unable to support her!

You are so unprofessional it's ridiculous.

Lifealittleboulder · 14/05/2025 20:11

CleverButScatty · 11/05/2025 19:41

You are so unprofessional it's ridiculous.

I agree, you’re basicly sharing this poor woman’s life.. where she is, her history and her nationality. I think that’s probably against every policy your charity have?!

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