Couple return to war-torn Ukraine due to cost and condition of UK rentals
Joe and Iryna Place are now renting in the western Ukrainian city of Uzhhorod, where they say it is safe but they face the prospect of power outages.

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Your support makes all the difference.A British-Ukrainian couple who fled the war in Ukraine for Britain have decided to move back to the war-torn country due to costs and conditions in the UKās housing market.
Joe Place, a British 29-year-old PhD student and content writer from Sheffield, South Yorkshire, and his wife Iryna, a 34-year-old Ukrainian working as a content manager, left their home in Kyiv in February to escape the conflict in the country.
Mrs Place had received a Ukraine Family Scheme visa and because the couple had this and employment in the UK they could not then apply for the Homes for Ukraine scheme.
Initially house-hopping between family and friends after arriving in the UK, Mr Place told the PA news agency they looked for a long-term place to live in Sheffield or Nottingham but were met with āterribleā housing conditions, high costs and rental requirements they could not meet.
After struggling for seven months to find a permanent home, the couple returned to Ukraine in September and are now living in the western city of Uzhhorod ā despite the prospect of electricity and heating outages due to Russian missile strikes.
āThis comes to the problem that everyone in the UK seems to be facing with finding (a rental),ā Mr Place said.
āWe doubled our budget and more ā¦ we had a very strict list of requirements and we just kept going āOK, well, compromise on this, compromise on this, compromise on thisā.
āAnything we got even remotely close to getting was just terrible.ā
The couple had arrived in Western Ukraine for a short visit to see family in September, but decided to stay as a result of the UK housing issues they faced.
āWe realised we actually quite like it back here, and weāre OK,ā Mr Place said.
āWe wouldnāt want to live back in Kyiv right now because itās not safe, but where we are it is very safe, mostly anyway.ā
Mr Place said because Russia has been hitting Ukrainian infrastructure with missile strikes, they are prepared for electricity and heating outages.
āTheyāre trying to get people to get prepared that you might lose the electricity and heating for a bit,ā he said.
āThat is something that is going to affect all of us, and thatās going to be difficult.ā
The couple, who met while they were both teaching English in Ukraine in 2019, will continue to go āback and forthā to the UK to see friends and family and for Mr Placeās work ā but the majority of this he is doing remotely in Ukraine.
Mr Place said it would cost them up to Ā£1,500 a month to rent in the UK, compared with Ā£500 in Ukraine, and housing agencies and landlords were asking for a previous yearās tax statement or six months of income in a UK bank account, which they could not provide.
He said money the couple already had in their Ukrainian bank accounts was not accepted and landlords had been repeatedly turning down their applications.
ā(Ā£500 is) kind of expensive here (in Ukraine),ā he said.
āThe west of Ukraine, where itās safer, the house prices have gone up quite a lot and the rents have gone up ā a lot of the locals struggle.
āBut obviously for us coming from the UK ā¦ this is still really affordable.ā
Mrs Place was on a Ukraine Family Scheme visa but said she did not receive the same amount of support from the government as those on the Homes for Ukraine scheme.
We've just uprooted our entire lives to come to the UK, we could also do with some help
āItās been incredible (the Homes for Ukraine scheme) ā¦ I hope we continue this approach for other crises,ā Mr Place said.
āBut I do think there was a bit more support for that scheme. With the family scheme there is a presumption that you will just stay with a spouse or child or people already settled here.
āNo, weāve just uprooted our entire lives to come to the UK, we could also do with some help.ā
Mr Place said there is a āpossibilityā he and his wife will decide to return to the UK next spring, but they do not want to plan far ahead because of the war.
āFor now we are quite happy being here,ā he added.
A government spokesperson said: āTaken together, our generous Homes for Ukraine and Ukraine Family schemes are one of the fastest and biggest visa programmes in UK history, with over 196,000 visas issued and more expected to come through these uncapped routes.
āWe expect Ukrainians entering the UK through the Ukraine Family Scheme to be primarily supported by family members, but they are also entitled to three yearsā leave to remain and full access to work, study and benefits ā including Universal Credit.
āLocal authorities have a duty to provide support to people on the family scheme, including homelessness where required.ā