Asking price of properties popular with UK first-time buyers hits record

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Those people hoping to get on to the UK housing ladder are facing record asking prices, as calm returns to the sector after last autumn’s mini-budget spooked the markets.

Rightmove, the property portal, reports that the average asking price of properties popular with first-time buyers – those with one or two bedrooms – has hit a record price of £224,963 in the last month. That is 2% higher than a year ago, even though higher mortgage rates have made homes less affordable.

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The first-time buyer section of the market appears to be outpacing the rest, with sales now 4% higher than in March 2019, while the “second-stepper sector” remains 4% behind, and top-of-the-ladder property sales 3% lower than four years ago.

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s director of property science innovation, said the increased activity in the first-time-buyer sector was “good for the health of the whole market”, as they are often the start of chains between buyers and sellers.

“However, it remains a challenging environment to get on to the ladder, with new record average asking prices and higher borrowing costs to budget for than a year ago,” Bannister added.

Overall, the number of sales agreed is 18% behind last year, as activity returned to “a more normal level”.

Across the market, asking prices are up by only 0.2% this month, to an average of £366,247, which is a “notably” smaller increase than the average increase of 1.2% for this time of year, Rightmove reports.

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Tom Bill, the head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, said the steep drop in property sales that followed the shock of the mini-budget has “bottomed out”.

Bill added: “The mortgage market has stabilised and buyers increasingly accept they are in a new lending landscape after 14 years of ultra-low rates.”

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Many buyers are succeeding in negotiating down sellers rather than stumping up asking prices.

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The London lettings and estate agent Benham and Reeves reports that the gap between the mortgage approved price of a buyer (£271,098) and the asking price expectations of a seller (£363,416) has increased to 34.1% across the UK.

That is the largest gap seen since the third quarter of 2020, showing a mismatch between seller expectation and the reality of current market conditions, Benham and Reeves said.

Last week the Office for National Statistics reported that the average price of a house sold in the UK had dropped by £5,000 since November, to £288,000 in February.

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