GalimAI Data · Condition · East Midlands

EPC-failing rental stock in the East Midlands: ~2,200 owners can't re-let

In the East Midlands - Nottingham and Leicester - condition has become a hard financial fact. East Midlands sits in the middle of the pack for stock that legally can't be re-let, which is exactly where developers and investors should be hunting.

~2,200
East Midlands owners with un-lettable (EPC F/G) stock
10%
of the 22,496 affected UK-wide
MEES
the rule freezing the rent

Across Nottingham and Leicester and the wider East Midlands, ~2,200 active freehold owners hold at least one property rated EPC F or G - meaning it cannot legally be re-let under MEES until it is upgraded or exempted. That is 10% of the 22,496 owners affected nationally.

Each of those properties is, in effect, frozen: no rent, and a repair bill the owner must either fund or escape by selling. Set against the rest of the country in the national EPC-by-region comparison, the East Midlands is a priority hunting ground - and it gets sharper still where this condition pressure overlaps the financial strain mapped in deteriorating balance sheets in the East Midlands.

Why it's an opportunity

For anyone who can fix a building, the East Midlands reads as a territory:

Find un-lettable stock in the East Midlands

Ask the portal to size MEES-blocked owners across Nottingham and Leicester, then narrow to those also under financial strain.

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Common questions

How many owners in the East Midlands can't legally re-let?

GalimAI data shows ~2,200 active freehold owners in the East Midlands hold a property that fails EPC and can't be re-let under MEES - 10% of the 22,496 affected UK-wide.

Which East Midlands cities are affected?

The stock spans Nottingham and Leicester and the surrounding region.

Why is this an opportunity?

Un-lettable stock is hard to hold and loses value, so owners often sell - giving developers discounted property with a clear retrofit uplift.

Data source: GalimAI proprietary analysis of EPC, HM Land Registry and Companies House records. Coverage: England and Wales. Figures aggregated, current for 2026.