Last updated:

24th June 2026

Tenant Satisfaction Measures

How we measure our housing performance

Since 2023 the Regulator of Social Housing (RSH) has set a number of perception and management measures for all social housing landlords to provide information on, called the Tenant Satisfaction Measures.

How we measure our performance

The measures focus on issues that matter most to tenants. For example, repairs, safety, complaints, and anti-social behaviour. They help us understand how well we're doing and where we need to improve as a housing provider. 

There are 22 Tenant Satisfaction Measures. We measure 10 of these directly (the management measures). For the perception based questions we worked with an external provider called GovMetrics, that enabled the service to send more surveys through digital communication methods via email and text messages. See our Tenant Satisfaction Measures Survey 2025 (PDF.)

The tables below highlights how Wokingham performed from the 2024 survey to 2025:

Tenant Perception Measures

Measure 2024/25 2025/26
Satisfaction with overall service from the council  64.1% 66.7%
Satisfaction with repairs service 68.5% 65.6%
Satisfaction with time taken for most recent repair  69.8% 67.1%
Satisfaction that the home is well maintained 64.6% 61.2%
Satisfaction that the home is safe 68.6% 67.9%
Satisfaction that the council listens to tenant views and acts upon them 51.0% 53.5%
Satisfaction that the council keeps tenants informed about things that matter to them 59.9% 59.7%
Agrees that the council treats tenants fairly and with respect 68.7% 66.9%
Satisfaction with council’s approach to complaint handling 38.0% 40.1%
Satisfaction that council keeps communal areas clean and well maintained 67.9% 73.5%
Satisfaction that council contributes positively to the neighbourhood 45.3% 46.2%
Satisfaction with anti-social behaviour case handling 44.5% 48.8%

Management Information Measures

Measure 2024/25 2025/26
Stage 1 complaints for every 1,000 homes 51.4 57.4
Stage 2 complaints for every 1,000 homes  10.3 13.0
Percentage of Stage 1 complaints responded to on time  66.7% 96.7%
Percentage of Stage 2 complaints responded to on time 70.4% 100%
ASB cases opened for every 1,000 homes 45.3 26.0
ASB cases involving hate incidents for every 1,000 homes 0.0 0.0
Percentage of Homes not meeting the Decent Homes Standard 0% 10.6%
Percentage of Non-emergency repairs completed on time 86.1% 85.0%
Percentage of Emergency repairs completed on time 88.9% 83.7%
Percentage of Gas safety checks completed 100% 100%
Percentage of Fire risk assessments completed 100% 100%
Percentage of Asbestos safety checks completed  100% 99.3%
Percentage of Water safety checks completed 100% 99.7%
Percentage of Lift safety checks completed 100% 99.5%

Summary of results

The summary below highlights the method undertaken to collect the results of the TSM (Tenant Satisfaction Measures) Survey and will published with our TSM.

a. Summary of achieved sample size (number of responses) – 541 responses in total were received, which equates to 21% of the housing stock.

b. Timing of survey – Survey responses were received between 29 September 2025 and 15 December 2025 allowing tenants who received a paper copy of the survey ample time to complete and post the survey (using a pre-paid envelope supplied) to us. All results were collated after the final response was received.

c. Collection method(s) – A combination of email, SMS and postal surveys were utilised. For tenants with an active email address an email survey was sent, for those without an email address but mobile number a SMS survey was sent, and for tenants with only a landline number a postal survey was sent to ensure all tenants received the survey.

d. Sample method – Census approach, meaning the survey was sent to all tenants at the same time.

e. Summary of the assessment of representativeness of the sample against the relevant tenant population (including reference to the characteristics against which representativeness has been assessed) – The sample represented was General Needs (2,348 properties) and Sheltered and Supported stock tenants (271 properties).

f. Any weighting applied to generate the reported perception measures (including a reference to all characteristics used to weight results) – Weighting not applied.

g. The role of any named external contractor(s) in collecting, generating, or validating the reported perception measures – Gov Metrics was the external contractor/agency that sent the email and SMS surveys and collated the responses. Tenants who did not have access to email or mobile phone were sent a paper-based survey.

h. The number of tenant households within the relevant population that have not been included in the sample frame due to the exceptional circumstances described in paragraph 63 with a broad rationale for their removal – All tenants received a copy of the survey by relevant channel advising tenants to contact the service if they required an alternative format or language. 

i. Reasons for any failure to meet the required sample size requirements summarised in Table 5 – Not applicable, required sample size achieved.

j. Type and amount of any incentives offered to tenants to encourage survey completion – Prize draw for £50 gift voucher.

k. Any other methodological issues likely to have a material impact on the tenant perception measures reported. – None.

l. Rationale of methodology – We have used a census approach to most accurately represent our tenant base; with a small stock size of approximately 2,600, we wanted to include all tenants to maximise the potential response rate and generate as much data as possible. Likewise, no weighting was applied as we felt this would not be beneficial due to the response rate. We did not conduct telephone or face-to-face surveys as we do not have sufficient resources to do so. The incentive of a prize draw was used to increase interest in the survey and encourage more tenants to take part.

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