Inside Airbnb capital of UK where fed-up locals have NO neighbours & say posh tourists are ‘ripping their heart out’
RESIDENTS in a picturesque seaside town have blasted holiday lets for forcing out families.
Their anger comes after research revealed 542 Airbnbs are available in Whitstable, Kent.
Some locals are fed up with Airbnbs in their picturesque townSWNS
Fisherman Graham West said it was being turned to a ‘ghost town’ in winterSWNS
Some claim neighbours are dwindling with houses left unoccupiedSWNS
This is compared with only eight liveable apartments listed on Rightmove in the same area, reported Kent Online.
Whitstable Society member Graham Cox said after the findings were published: “Airbnbs have stripped the life out of the core of the town.”
Residents and workers echoed Mr Cox’s comments last week – and even one Airbnb owner agreed.
Artist John Butterworth, 62, has lived in the town for 30 years.
He listed his mother’s home on Airbnb when she died as he didn’t want to sell it, and still lives nearby.
But he said: “The reason I started this was because I was losing a job and needed an income.
“I am aware that there are a growing number of them. When I started this ten years ago there weren’t as many. I don’t think it is a good thing.
“It became a bit of an epidemic. I think the government incentivised people because they don’t charge taxes. I think that they should charge us.
“What you find with most of these is that the owners don’t even live in Whitstable.
“I have started to notice that there aren’t any neighbours. Half the houses in this street are Airbnb.
“I came down here because I couldn’t afford to live in London. Now I can’t afford to live in Whitstable.
“I moved to Whitstable because of the community and that community has been compromised.”
Fisherman Graham West, 62, described Whitstable as as “ghost town” in the winter.
He said: “Come in November and see how many lights are on. It comes to winter and this place becomes a ghost town.
“Airbnbs make up 60 per cent of the area. There are no locals anymore. Outside of weekends it is dead.
“Most people here don’t have neighbours anymore.
“It is ridiculous. People are buying houses and not living in them.”
Residents claim people are snapping houses purely for short lettingSWNS
The town has many more Airbnbs than rentals on Rightmove, according to recent dataSWNS
Data shows a yawning discrepancy in Airbnb listings compared with those on property site RightMove, according to Kent Online figures taken from May 1 2024
Having lived in the area his whole life Mr West has seen a lot of change and believes the Airbnbs are causing the local businesses to struggle.
He added: “I think it has made a lot of difference to this town.
“The businesses start to struggle in the winter. There are lots of customers in the summertime but it’s not for long, and you can’t sustain a business on two months of the year.
“It would bring the community spirit back if they clamped down on it. I think they should be made to pay council tax.”
Steve Notts has been running his boat tour business in Whitstable harbour for 24 years.
All the houses down the road have no locals. Come in the winter and they (houses) are dead
Steve NottsWhitstable businessman
He said: “It is not good for locals. People are doing Airbnb rather than renting their houses.
“All the houses down the road have no locals. Come in the winter and they are dead.
“I started this business in 2000 and it had changed a lot since then. There were a lot more local people around then.”
It seems that a lot of the change to the area has happened in the last decade, with many saying the Airbnbs really started picking up just before the pandemic.”
Shannon Jackson, 40, has been living in Whitstable for nine years with her two children, and says she has seen so much change in that time.
The pub bartender said: “It is just crazy. I was walking along my street the other day just counting them.
“They are renovating the house next to me right now to become one. There used to be such a nice old couple living there.
“In the short space of time I have been here there has been a lot of change.
“It is just not a community anymore. I like talking to people and neighbours but now everyone just comes and goes. It used to have a real community feel, it was a fisherman village.
“I am worried that we won’t be able to afford to stay here. The locals in the pub are all fed up, but they won’t move because they love it here.”
The majority of the people buying houses here are either going to retire or let it out. Nobody in a little fishing village can afford these prices.
Bob Spinkresident
Resident Bob Spink, who has lived in Whitstable for 15 years says he pities the younger generation as they will never be able to afford to live in the area.
The 71-year-old said: “There’s too many of them [Airbnbs]. It is a cash cow as far as the council is concerned.
“The youngsters who want to live and work here can’t afford to. So many of them are having to move out of Whitstable.
“The majority of the people buying houses here are either going to retire or let it out.
“Nobody in a little fishing village can afford these prices.”
AIRBNB BACKERS
Not everyone sees Airbnbs as a negative, some business owners saying that they rely on holiday-goers as customers.
Andy Thomas is the owner of a harbour shop called Kites and Things which he has run for 17 years, having run a high street shop for 30 before that.
Living a couple of miles down the road he says that he has occasionally stayed in an Airbnb when attending something that goes on quite late.
He said: “For me, the more tourists that are in the town the better.
“I sell stuff to local people, but you need a new flow of people and the Airbnb’s bring that in.
“They don’t drain the life from the area, they put money in the businesses.
The more tourists in town the better
Andy Thomasshop owner
“We need Airbnb, that’s the majority of the people in the town that are spending money now.”
Matt, 24, from sandwich works at a café which is owned by a holiday company, next door to some converted fisherman huts that are now rented as rooms.
He agrees that the tourists are good customers and add lots of financial benefit to the area.
He said: “For us as a business it is good. A lot of people just come down for the weekend.”
In response to the comment that the tourists strip the life out of the town he added: “sounds like an old man with too much time on his hands.”
ON THE FENCE
Many other residents and local business owners found themselves torn on the issue, stating that there are positives and negatives to the flood of tourists.
Carly Firminger, 36, runs a café just outside of the high street which she says luckily is frequented by locals.
After living in Whitstable her whole life, she says that she had to move out to Herne Bay as house prices became far too expensive.
She said: “I don’t live here anymore because the house prices have been pushed up so much.
“Half of them are empty most of the year, and it’s sad when you see people who can’t afford to live here and there’s all these empty houses.
“I wanted to live here, and I wanted to raise my kids here, but I simply can’t afford it.
Airbnb's response
Airbnb says the majority of its hosts in the Kent county are innocent, “everyday people”.
According to Airbnb data, two thirds of UK hosts use their profits only to cover increased cost-of-living.
A spokesperson told The Sun: “The majority of our hosts in Kent are everyday people who share their primary home for fewer than three nights a month (according to 2023 Airbnb data).
“We recognise the housing challenges towns like Whitstable face and we support the new regulations for short-term lets in England, which will give local authorities the information they need to enforce rules and protect everyday Brits who host to earn additional income.”
According to the government, those new regulations mean:
Planning permission is now required for future short-term lets
A mandatory national hosts register will provide valuable information and help ensure accommodation is safe
Proposals will give communities greater control over future growth
Homeowners can continue to let out their own main or sole home for up to 90 nights a year
Airbnb says it has long supported and called for such reforms.
The company also points out research by economic consultants BiGGAR found Airbnb travel provided a £2.9billion boost to the UK economy in 2022, supporting more than 100,000 jobs.
The study was commissioned by Airbnb itself in November 2023.
“But it is good for business. Carpenters and painters are cashing in big time. There are lots of people who are becoming cleaners too as there is such high demand for them.
“There are good points and there are bad points.”
Charlie Matthews, 33, who just opened his stall making pizza near the harbour says he also has mixed feelings on the influx of Airbnbs.
He added: “I don’t think they are great. There is just too many of them around town, it brings the price of everything up.
“There is nowhere to live. Every other house is an Airbnb.
“The place is packed in the summer for these two months, but the rest is awful.
“I heard that there’s not even enough people living in the town now to fill the schools.
“It does bring a lot of business too, but we need a better balance.”
Matt said the spread of Airbnbs was good for business at his sandwich shopSWNS
Converted huts are being offered for £75 per nightSWNS
John Butterworth owns an Airbnb, but says he can see the dark side of the short-let spreadSWNS
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