People are increasingly being made homeless because they cannot afford their rent or their landlord kicks them out at the end of a tenancy agreement, according to government figures.

Since 2010, homelessness has gone up by just under a third amid a nationwide crisis in the number of affordable homes.

The figures, produced by the Department for Communities and Local Government, showed the number of households who became homeless because of the end of an assured, shorthold tenancy had gone up by 154 per cent between the third quarters of 2010 and 2015. The number citing rent arrears as the reason went up by 36 per cent.

Labour said the figures demonstrated the “particularly stark problems” that people in the private rented sector faced.

The charity Shelter said homelessness was rising partly because people are forced to leave their homes at the end of a tenancy if a landlord decides to increase the rent and they cannot afford another property in the same area.

John Healey, the Shadow Housing Minister, said: “These new figures highlight the particularly stark problems people ... can face. Ministers need to get a grip.”