England's social housing waiting lists would take an astonishing 119 years to clear at the current rate of building, according to new research from the housing charity Shelter. With more than 1.3 million households waiting for a social home and only 12,198 new social homes built last year, the crisis has reached a critical tipping point. This means for every new social home delivered, there are 110 households competing for it.
The Scale of the Crisis
Shelter's analysis reveals that the number of new social rent homes built annually has decreased by 64% over the last 15 years. Meanwhile, the number of homeless households in temporary accommodation has skyrocketed by 155%. In 20% of council areas across England, not a single social home was built in the last two years, and in 30% of areas, fewer than 10 were built.
Sarah Elliott, chief executive of Shelter, warned that if the government continues to deliver social homes at a snail's pace, "none of us alive today will live to see the end of the housing emergency." She added that communities are being "ripped apart" and children are being "trapped in homelessness for generations."
Historical Context: A Dramatic Decline
At the peak of social home delivery in 1967, 46% of all new homes built in England were for social rent, and councils provided almost all of them (97%). Today, the proportion has fallen to a fraction of that, with private developers and housing associations now dominating the limited construction.
The chart below shows the stark contrast between past and present delivery rates:
| Year | New Social Homes Built | Percentage of All New Homes |
|---|---|---|
| 1967 | ~200,000 | 46% |
| 2025 | 12,198 | ~2% |
Why Can't Councils Build More?
A key barrier is the £29 billion housing debt passed on to local authorities by the central government in 2012 as part of a council house financing agreement. Shelter argues that servicing the interest on this debt is "paralysing councils" and forcing them to sell off more homes through heavily discounted right-to-buy sales than they can afford to replace.
Sarah Elliott explained: "It is absurd councils cannot build the homes we need because of a housing debt that was passed on to them by the government, which it has made almost impossible to pay off." She called on the government to fulfill its promise of a council housing renaissance.
Voices of Concern
Suzanne Muna, secretary and co-founder of the Social Housing Action Campaign, described the figures as exposing a "deluded government" that blindly parrots simplistic targets like "build, baby, build" as if they offer a universal cure. She said: "This is a systemic failure of successive governments and is now actively exploited by private landlords and housing associations who are converting traditional family homes into temporary accommodation to lease to councils at extortionate rents."
Muna called for a fundamentally different approach to public housing, demanding "massive, sustained investment in council housing."
The Human Cost
Behind the statistics are real families living in uncertainty. Homelessness has climbed to record levels, with families worrying that their wait for a safe and secure home will exceed their lifetime. Children are growing up in temporary accommodation, often moving between hostels and B&Bs, disrupting their education and stability.
- 1.3 million households on waiting lists
- 12,198 new homes built last year
- 119 years to clear the backlog at current pace
- 64% drop in annual social home building over 15 years
- 155% rise in homeless households in temporary accommodation
FAQ
What is social housing?
Social housing is affordable housing provided by local councils or housing associations at below-market rents. It is intended for people on low incomes or those with specific housing needs.
Why can't councils build more social homes?
Councils are hampered by a £29 billion housing debt from 2012, which consumes much of their budget in interest payments. Additionally, right-to-buy policies force them to sell homes at a discount, often making it impossible to replace them.
What can be done to fix the crisis?
Experts call for massive, sustained investment in council housing, cancellation or restructuring of the housing debt, and a shift away from reliance on private developers. Shelter urges the government to prioritize social rent homes over other types of housing.
