Hannah Carney, 26, also shares a property without a lounge and says none of the places she had rented since she was 18 had a living room.

She says she misses having a “chill place that is social” and it means she and her flatmates probably spend more on going out for dinner and drinks.

“I’d love to say that all properties should have a communal area. I wish that was the norm, but I know it’s not realistic,” she said.

The best she and her flatmate could do, she says, is to have movie nights in a box room that they also use to hang their washing.

Matt Hutchinson, director of SpareRoom said: “We’ve had so many messages from people who met their best friends and partners in flatshares, who’ve raised families or started businesses together.

“Those kinds of stories will become rarer if communal, sociable spaces within homes are not protected. Sadly, loneliness is alarmingly common.

“With rents as unaffordable as they are now, it’s understandable people are looking for ways to cut the cost of living.”