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John Lewis Partnership exits build-to-rent sector

Retail group cites shift in financial environment for change of direction.

4 March 2026

The John Lewis Partnership has announced it is withdrawing from the build-to-rent (BTR) sector, citing a “fundamental shift” in the economic conditions that supported its property ambitions when they were launched in 2020.

 

The UK’s largest employee-owned business said the decision forms part of a wider strategic refocus on its core retail operations, including John Lewis department stores and Waitrose supermarkets, under executive chair Jason Tarry.

 

The move marks the end of a diversification strategy introduced under former chair Sharon White, which aimed to generate 40% of partnership revenue from outside traditional retail. Residential property, particularly build-to-rent, had been positioned as a key pillar of that strategy. Some sites had received approval such as the Reading site (pictured above).

 

In a statement, a partnership spokesperson said the rental property ambition was based on a “very different financial environment”, characterised by more stable investment returns, lower borrowing costs and more affordable construction costs.

 

Despite not completing any homes under its own development programme, the partnership progressed three planning applications covering around 1,000 homes and managed third-party BTR homes across four sites.

 

The exit reflects broader viability pressures in the residential development market, where higher interest rates, build cost inflation and softer investment yields have challenged the economics of new build-to-rent schemes.

 

The decision leaves John Lewis returning its focus fully to retail operations as it reshapes its long-term strategy in a more constrained capital environment.

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