New council house developments to benefit from Mayor's £6m Social Housing Accelerator funding
Published: Tuesday 13 Jan 2026
The grant is coming from the £40 million Social Housing Accelerator Fund launched by Richard Parker, Mayor of the West Midlands, in October to help drive the biggest social housing programme the West Midlands has seen in decades.
The fund, which is managed by the West Midlands Combined Authority (WMCA) will enable the council to convert the 140 homes, that are under construction or soon to be built, to social rent homes – the most affordable type of home available.
It further enhances the offer the council is providing to local people under the £19.7 million Homes England funded Social and Affordable Housing Programme pilot, which will see construction start on more new homes over 2 years.
A small development of two homes for social rent at Langdale Drive
The homes will see a mixture of 1, 2, 3 and 4 bedroom houses, flats and bungalows for affordable and social rent on new sites and through the replacement of existing homes that have poor thermal efficiency and are of poor quality or non traditional construction.
Rents for the new properties will fall in line with the existing council structure, with a new 2 bedroom property in Low Hill, for example, costing £46.52 a week less than a property classed as affordable rent.
The Mayor said: “This funding means 140 Wolverhampton families struggling to afford a warm and secure place to call home will see their lives changed for the better.
“By working together in this way, we can provide more genuinely affordable homes and start to tackle this housing crisis. It has blighted too many lives, including those of thousands of children, for far too long.
“Having a secure, affordable home is a basic right for people and that's why I'm focused on building more social homes across our region."
City of Wolverhampton Council Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for City Housing, Councillor Steve Evans, added: “This additional funding from the WMCA will allow us to make a significant number of new council homes affordable for residents on low incomes.
“We are committed to driving the construction of more affordable housing and these social rent homes will have a huge impact, helping get people and families out of temporary accommodation and off the housing waiting list.
“The Social and Affordable Housing Programme is just one part of our overall house building strategy, which will deliver hundreds of new and better homes for local people in well connected neighbourhoods across the city, enabling them to benefit from improved health outcomes, lifestyle and sustainability.”
The Mayor launched the Social Housing Accelerator Fund last year after cutting through red tape and securing greater flexibility over the West Midland Combined Authority (WMCA) housing funds. Restrictions placed by the previous government meant they could not be directly spent on affordable and social housing.
The £40 million secured will directly fund the delivery of 1,000 new social homes. Those will be on top of over 750 social rent homes the Mayor has already unlocked since taking office as part of his ongoing ‘Homes for Everyone’ priority.
Further enquiries
For all other enquiries from members of the public go to our contact us page: https://www.wmca.org.uk/contact-us/