Birmingham's

£500 Million

Property Opportunity

How to Secure Long-Term Double Returns Before New Regulations Lock You Out

While most property investors are fighting over the same tired strategies, a funding explosion in Birmingham is creating £1,000+ monthly profits from ordinary 3-bed houses and how you can access this opportunity before the regulatory window closes

Birmingham's

£500 Million

Property Opportunity

How to Secure Long-Term Double Returns Before New Regulations Lock You Out

While most property investors are fighting over the same tired strategies, a funding explosion in Birmingham is creating £1,000+ monthly profits from ordinary 3-bed houses and how you can access this opportunity before the regulatory window closes

The Same Properties. Double (Sometimes Triple) the Returns

There's a type of property model generating consistent monthly profits in Birmingham right now.

Most investors have never heard of it. The ones who have are staying quiet.

Not because it's complicated.

Not because it requires massive capital.

But because the fewer people who know about it, the more opportunity there is to capture.

I've been working inside Birmingham City Council's supported accommodation framework for years now.

And I've watched them spend half a billion pounds a year funding this model while most property investors are still fighting over standard BTLs and HMOs.

Let me be specific.

£500 million. Every year.

Going into a type of accommodation that's creating £1,000 to £1,500 profit per month from standard 3-bed properties.

For context: a typical single let on the same road might clear £100 a month. Maybe £800 if you're running it as an HMO.

This model is generating double that. Sometimes triple.

And it's not speculative.

It's not creative finance.

It's government-backed funding creating predictable, reliable income.

The reason it works comes down to something most property investors have never looked at closely: government funding for vulnerable accommodation.

The rental rates aren't set by the open market.

They're set by council funding budgets designed to house vulnerable people quickly and safely.

Which means you're not competing with other landlords on Rightmove.

You're working within a funding framework that prioritises speed and need over price.

And that's why the profit margins are higher.

And in this training, I'm going to show you exactly how you can access this opportunity - even if you don't own property in Birmingham yet, don't have existing council relationships, and don't want to handle the operational complexity yourself.

Where the Extra £600-£900 Monthly Profit Actually Comes From

Here's what I've been watching happen in Birmingham over the past few years.

The demand for supported accommodation has exploded.

We're talking about going from a few hundred placements to over 35,000 people now living in this type of housing.

That's not a small shift.

That's a structural change in how vulnerable people are being housed across the UK.

And Birmingham is at the centre of it.

The council is spending £500 million a year trying to keep up with demand.

But here's the critical part most investors miss:

This isn't about finding cheaper properties or squeezing more rooms into the same space.

It's about understanding how council funding works differently than market rents - and why that creates opportunities that don't follow normal property economics.

When a council needs to house someone in crisis - whether that's domestic violence survivors, families facing homelessness, or vulnerable individuals needing support - they're not shopping around on Rightmove looking for the cheapest option.

They're working from funding allocations designed to solve an urgent social problem.

And those funding rates reflect the urgency and the need, not what a private tenant might pay in the open market.

That's the entire mechanism.

It's not a loophole.

It's not creative accounting.

It's just how government-backed accommodation funding operates.

And most property investors have never looked at it because they don't know it exists.

While HMO Investors Get Blocked, This Model Gets Approved

Here's something most property investors don't realise about HMOs.

Even if you've got the perfect property, the right location, and you meet all the safety and licensing standards - the council can still say no.

It's called Article 4.

It's a regulation that gives local councils the power to control where HMOs can operate, completely separate from whether your property meets the required standards.

The council might say: "We've got too many HMOs in this area already. Application denied."

And there's nothing you can do about it.

Your property could be perfectly compliant.

Fire detection systems installed.

Room sizes correct.

Everything by the book.

While HMO Investors Get Blocked, This Model Gets Approved

Here's something most property investors don't realise about HMOs.

Even if you've got the perfect property, the right location, and you meet all the safety and licensing standards - the council can still say no.

It's called Article 4.

It's a regulation that gives local councils the power to control where HMOs can operate, completely separate from whether your property meets the required standards.

The council might say: "We've got too many HMOs in this area already. Application denied."

And there's nothing you can do about it.

Your property could be perfectly compliant.

Fire detection systems installed.

Room sizes correct.

Everything by the book.

But if the council decides they don't want more HMOs in that postcode, you're blocked.

This is why so many HMO investors are hitting walls right now.

Article 4 restrictions are tightening across the UK, and councils are saying no more often than they're saying yes.

But here's what makes supported accommodation different.

It operates under a completely separate set of laws.

You still need to meet HMO standards - the property still needs to be safe, compliant, and properly set up.

But you don't need Article 4 approval.

Because the council isn't evaluating it based on "do we want another HMO in this area?"

They're evaluating it based on: "Do we have vulnerable people who need housing right now, and does this property meet the required standards?"

If the answer is yes to both - and in Birmingham, the answer is almost always yes - the property gets approved.

No arbitrary restrictions.

No council deciding they've had enough HMOs this year.

Just: does it meet standards, and is there demand?

That's it.

This is why investors who understand supported accommodation are moving faster and facing fewer barriers than traditional HMO operators right now.

They're working inside a framework that prioritises need over arbitrary area limits.

Birmingham's £500 Million Spend - And Why It Matters for Your Returns

I get asked regularly whether this model works in other parts of the country.

And the answer is: it exists elsewhere.

But Birmingham is where the opportunity is most accessible right now.

The council has established clear pathways.

The funding is there.

The demand is immediate.

More importantly, I've spent years building relationships with the operators who understand how to deliver this properly and are already working with the council.

Which means there's a proven structure in place.

You're not pioneering a new model in an untested area.

You're stepping into something that's already working, with partners who've done this repeatedly.

But here's what's changing.

Birmingham City Council is actively trying to reduce the £500 million it's spending on this sector every year.

I've watched them tighten criteria.
I've seen them introduce new regulations.

They're separating the operators who are doing this properly from the ones who aren't.
And if you're not positioned correctly before these changes take effect, you'll either miss the opportunity entirely, or you'll get swept up in the shake-out with the operators who didn't build this the right way.

This isn't manufactured urgency.

I'm watching this regulatory shift happen in real time.

The window for entry is open right now. 
But I can see it closing.

And honestly? Some people in the housing sector have told me I shouldn't be sharing this information publicly.

Understanding the Path to Higher-Return Birmingham Properties

I'm walking through exactly how this model operates in Birmingham right now, what makes it work, why the profit margins are what they are, and how you can access it through our proven partnership structure - even if you've never done a supported accommodation deal before.

More importantly, I'm showing you the parts most investors get wrong when they try to enter this space without understanding how the council system actually works.

Understanding the Path to Higher-Return Birmingham Properties

I'm walking through exactly how this model operates in Birmingham right now, what makes it work, why the profit margins are what they are, and how you can access it through our proven partnership structure - even if you've never done a supported accommodation deal before.

More importantly, I'm showing you the parts most investors get wrong when they try to enter this space without understanding how the council system actually works.

In This Session, You’ll Discover:

Why Birmingham City Council is spending £500 million a year on this model

And what that funding structure means for the returns you can realistically generate from a standard 3-bed property

The difference between supported accommodation that works and the cowboys who are about to get swept out

And what that funding structure means for the returns you can realistically generate from a standard 3-bed property

How the profit model actually breaks down


From acquisition to setup to monthly returns, so you understand exactly where the £1,000-£1,500 profit per property is coming from and why it's not speculative

Why this isn't something you can just "figure out" by Googling or calling the councilThe relationships, the structure, and the operational requirements that make this work are not publicly documented in a way that's actionable

What the upcoming regulatory changes mean

And specifically how to position yourself now so you're operating on the right side of the new criteria when they come into effect

How to access this opportunity if you don't have Birmingham properties already

Because this isn't limited to people who already own in the area, but there are specific requirements around where the property needs to be located

The partnership structure that handles the operational complexity

Because while the returns are strong, the management requirements for supported accommodation are different from standard BTLs or HMOs, and most investors don't want to (or shouldn't) handle that themselves

Why speed matters right now

Not in a manufactured "limited seats" way, but because the regulatory window is actively closing and the council is tightening entry criteria as we speak

This High-Return Strategy Makes Sense If:

How some investors are analysing deals faster and more accurately, and why that’s directly translating into stronger offers and higher yielding outcomes
Where AI actually saves money in deal analysis, by surfacing risks and weak assumptions early, before they turn into expensive mistakes
How to reach clarity on whether a deal works before you’ve sunk hours into spreadsheets or conversations that go nowhere
How simple AI can be used during refurb and project planning to keep things on track, spot issues earlier, and reduce the usual time and cost overruns
A smarter way to think about tenant and property management, using AI to reduce friction, admin, and unnecessary headaches
How to cut through legal documents and property paperwork quickly, so you can understand what actually matters without wading through pages of jargon
Why finding the right opportunities now is less about scrolling more listings, and more about filtering and prioritising them properly

Skip This If:

A smarter way to think about tenant and property management, using AI to reduce friction, admin, and unnecessary headaches
How to cut through legal documents and property paperwork quickly, so you can understand what actually matters without wading through pages of jargon
Why finding the right opportunities now is less about scrolling more listings, and more about filtering and prioritising them properly
A smarter way to think about tenant and property management, using AI to reduce friction, admin, and unnecessary headaches
How to cut through legal documents and property paperwork quickly, so you can understand what actually matters without wading through pages of jargon

What You'll Know About Accessing These Returns

You'll understand exactly how Birmingham City Council's £500 million funding structure creates different economics than anything you're seeing in the standard property market.

You'll know why a 3-bed property generating £1,200+ profit per month isn't speculative or over-optimistic - it's how the council funding model works when it's operated properly.

You'll see what the upcoming regulatory tightening actually means, and how to position yourself on the right side of it before the criteria change.

And you'll know whether this opportunity makes sense for you, what's involved in accessing it, and who handles the operational complexity so you don't have to.

This isn't about convincing you to do something that doesn't fit.

It's about showing you what's actually available right now in Birmingham, and letting you decide if it's worth pursuing.

Meet the Operators Behind This Strategy

Henna Mahmood

Henna has been working inside Birmingham's supported accommodation sector since 2019, when she pivoted from standard buy-to-lets and student HMOs to focus entirely on social housing and emergency placements.

She currently houses over 300 tenants across Birmingham, working directly with Birmingham City Council to provide accommodation for some of the most vulnerable people in the city - including survivors of domestic violence and families in crisis.

What makes Henna's experience particularly relevant to this training is that she's built her entire operation around the council funding model we'll be discussing.

She understands the criteria.

She knows the relationships.

She's navigated the approvals process repeatedly.

And she's watched the regulatory landscape shift over the past few years as the council has tightened standards and separated operators who are delivering properly from those who aren't.

If you want to understand how this model actually works on the ground in Birmingham, Henna is the person who can show you.

Saj Hussain

Over nearly two decades, Saj has built a multi-million pound property portfolio using none of his own money, working across everything from high-end HMOs to commercial conversions to supported accommodation.

He's co-founded seven property-related businesses, built a team of 31 staff, and his YouTube content has helped over 4 million viewers rethink what's possible in property investing.

But what's relevant for this training specifically is that Saj has been working inside the Birmingham supported accommodation space alongside Henna and Impact Network.

He understands the funding model, the profit structure, and the regulatory changes that are coming.

More importantly, he knows how to explain complex property strategies in a way that makes them accessible to intermediate investors who want to move quickly without cutting corners

This session is about showing you what he and Henna have learned working inside this system - and why the window for entry is tightening faster than most investors realise.

Why Waiting Means Missing This Profit Opportunity

Birmingham City Council's £500 million annual spend has created an opportunity that most property investors still don't know exists.



The funding is there.



The demand is immediate.



The profit margins are significantly higher than standard BTLs or HMOs.

But the regulatory tightening is happening right now.

And if you're not positioned correctly before the criteria change, you'll either miss it entirely or get caught on the wrong side of the shake-out.

This training shows you exactly what's happening, why it works, and how to access it properly.

You'll leave knowing exactly how to get involved - whether you own property in Birmingham already or you're starting from scratch

Why Waiting Means Missing This Profit Opportunity

Birmingham City Council's £500 million annual spend has created an opportunity that most property investors still don't know exists.



The funding is there.



The demand is immediate.



The profit margins are significantly higher than standard BTLs or HMOs.

But the regulatory tightening is happening right now.

And if you're not positioned correctly before the criteria change, you'll either miss it entirely or get caught on the wrong side of the shake-out.

This training shows you exactly what's happening, why it works, and how to access it properly.

You'll leave knowing exactly how to get involved - whether you own property in Birmingham already or you're starting from scratch