The stark figure - equivalent to 693,000 households – comes following one of the most comprehensive surveys of its kind into the housing needs of the population.
The report was commissioned by Homes for Scotland (HFS), the sector body representing the country’s home builders, and carried out by The Diffley Partnership and Rettie Consultancy & Research. It finds that estimates of housing need to date, calculated through the Scottish Government’s Housing Need and Demand Assessment (HNDA) tool, have significantly underestimated how many households are facing housing hardship. One of the issues this has led to, according to HFS, is the insufficient allocation of land for social, affordable and private house building, which has further exacerbated the housing crisis.
The report follows declarations of housing emergencies by City of Edinburgh Council, Glasgow City Council and Argyll & Bute last year.
The “Existing Housing Need in Scotland” report includes the findings of a survey of 13,690 people across Scotland. It found that an alarming number of households are not being counted in official figures as being in housing need.
This includes those living in unfit properties, overcrowded accommodation and homes requiring specialist adaptations as well as households that are concealed or struggling financially as a direct result of high housing costs.
According to HFS, as the HNDA tool only includes those in acute need (namely homeless households in temporary accommodation and overcrowded households that have at least one concealed family), the Scottish Government and local authorities are underestimating the true extent of Scotland’s housing need.
HFS Chief Executive Jane Wood said:
“Adequate housing is a human right, but today more than a quarter of households in Scotland are in one or more forms of housing need. There is simply no excuse for Scotland to continue on this path. By utilising data to inform policies, and with public and private sectors working collaboratively and intelligently together, we have the opportunity to recognise the true extent of housing need in Scotland and to build the homes of all tenures that we need in adequate numbers and in the right places.
“We need to create an inclusive and agile housing system, one that meets the needs of all those living in Scotland and which can cope with additional demand caused by unexpected events such as those seeking refuge from war.
“As this comprehensive report demonstrates, the level of housing need far exceeds the current calculations used to determine where and how many homes need to be built in Scotland. It provides local authorities and the Scottish Government with an easy and robust data tool to help them understand true housing need at local and national levels.
“It is our hope that, in our shared endeavour to end the housing crisis, this data will be welcomed and used by the Scottish Government, local authorities and other stakeholders to ensure that our housing needs are properly met.”