All you need to know about what is happening to house prices and housing market activity in Yorkshire and beyond

Rightmove report that the average price of property coming to market has dropped by 0.2 per cent this month to £371,907, marginally below the zero per cent norm for this time of year as new sellers temper their price expectations but asking prices in Yorkshire bucked the trend.

Our region saw asking prices rise by 0.7 per cent this month bringing the year-on-year increase to 2.1 per cent. The average time to sell in Yorkshire is now 55 days. The nearby North West saw a fall of 0.8 per cent in asking prices while the North East saw a two per cent drop. Only three other regions saw a small growth in asking prices.

These wereThe East Midlands with a 1.1 per cent, the South West with 0.2 per cent and London with 0.5 per cent. Analysts at the property portal say price trends have proved more resilient than most expected during the first half of the year, with average asking UK prices now 2.6 per cent higher than in January.

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However, the brakes on the economy being applied by the Bank of England to combat the surprisingly sticky inflation figures are biting, with the number of sales agreed in June now being 12 per cent behind 2019’s more normal market level. Buyer demand remains resilient at three times higher than at this time in 2019, with agents reporting that right-priced homes are still attracting motivated buyers due to the shortage of property for sale compared to historic norms.

Latest house price dataLatest house price data
Latest house price data

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s Director of Property Science, says: “The interest-rate brakes being applied more strongly to slow the economy are now beginning to bite in the housing market. While prices and sales bounced back this year much more strongly than most expected, the unexpectedly stubborn inflation figures and the surprise of further mortgage rate rises when many felt that they had stabilised, have contributed to the fall in prices and number of sales agreed.

“However, buyer demand remains resilient at three per cent above 2019’s more normal market levels, buoyed by a shortage of quality property for sale and ongoing housing needs. First-time buyers, trader-uppers and downsizers with higher deposits and lower mortgage requirements appear to be still keenly searching the market, not wanting to miss out on the right property that is not over-priced and that they can still afford.”

The two larger home sectors have been most impacted by lower levels of agreed sales. The numbers of sales agreed in June in the mid-market second-stepper sector and the top-of-the-ladder sector are 14 per cent behind 2019’s level. Some discretionary movers in these sectors who are trading up and are substantially increasing their mortgage are likely reassessing their budgets, waiting to see which direction mortgage rates head in the coming months. The smaller home, of two-bedrooms or fewer has been less impacted, with June’s sales agreed figure nine per cent below 2019’s level.

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Rightmove say that the typical first-time buyer sector has held up most strongly throughout the first half of the year, highlighting an ongoing determination from many first-time buyers to navigate the unsettled mortgage market and get onto the ladder, particularly with rents at record levels. It is also an indication of some people deciding to retire early and downsize to a smaller property, perhaps to release some equity from their home for lifestyle or early retirement, or to gift a deposit to family first-time buyers.

Agents report that even with market challenges, homes priced correctly in line with local market conditions are still attracting strong interest from motivated buyers keen to move. However, the dangers of sellers initially over-pricing and harming their prospects of finding a buyer are highlighted by the latest Rightmove research.

Properties that need a reduction in asking price are more than 10 per cent less likely to find a buyer than those that were priced right from the start. With the chances of selling already lower due to current market conditions, initial over-pricing reduces those chances markedly further. As for mortgages, the latest snapshot from Rightmove’s mortgage tracker shows that the average rate for a five-year fixed, 85 per cent Loan-To-Value mortgage is now 5.69 per cent, up by 0.49 per cent compared to this time last month but still below October’s 5.89 per cent following the mini-Budget.

Tim Bannister says: “The continuing twists and turns of persistent inflation and higher mortgage rates have posed some additional challenges for the market. Agents report that some movers are pausing until there is more certainty that mortgage rates have stabilised, as well as reviewing how higher costs affect their plans.

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“However, there remains a large volume of motivated buyers who can factor rate rises into their budgets and are continuing to enquire about homes for sale, which is keeping the market functioning, albeit now with lower sales levels than at this time in 2019. Sellers who price right the first time, rather than starting with too high an asking price only to reduce later, have a much better chance of attracting one of these motivated buyers, and a good local agent will provide sellers with accurate evidence of prices that are being achieved in their area.”