In the report accompanying his amendment, Deputy Coles notes that data included in the 2021 Census indicated that 44.1% of all owner-occupied homes are under-occupied.
According to the Census report by Statistics Jersey, this means they had “at least two bedrooms more than they needed”.

Pictured: Deputy Tom Coles is calling for a scheme to encourage and incentivise right-sizing.
Last year, former Housing Minister Russell Labey launched a survey about how the Government could help islanders to live in homes “that are the right size for their needs”.
And a section of the 2022 Bridging Island Plan states that it “supports and enables the provision of a proportion of right-sizing homes on sites zoned for the provision of affordable homes”.
Deputy Coles’s report states: “The purpose of this amendment is to bring back to the foreground the need for right-sizing in our bid to tackle the housing crisis.
“It is not the intention of this amendment to handcuff government to any single mechanism to encourage right-sizing.
“It would be my personal opinion that we should be looking at a reduced stamp-duty rate for those right-sizing, as there would be an additional transaction going in the other direction that would make up for this reduction.”