The total value of all homes across the UK has reached a record high of £8.7tn but rising mortgage costs are likely to lead to a dip in 2023.
The country’s 30m homes were valued by the estate agent Savills at a combined £8.68tn at the end of 2022, a rise of just over 5% or £425bn on a year earlier.
However, it was a smaller rise than the £700bn annual increase in 2021 and the £500bn rise in 2020 as buyers paid more for roomier homes during the pandemic and the subsequent shift towards working from home.
“The growth in house prices over the past three years has added considerably to the paper wealth of homeowners, driven in no small part by the well-documented ‘race for space’ over the period,” Lucian Cook, the head of residential research at Savills, said.
Savills said it expected 2022 to represent a “high watermark” for the value of the nation’s homes for the next few years and warned prices were likely to fall as rising mortgage costs squeezed first- and second-time buyers.
“Though mortgage borrowing equates to less than a fifth of the nation’s housing stock value, the cost and availability of that debt will be crucial to the shape of the housing market over the next four or five years,” Cook said. “Recent figures from HMRC indicate that buying activity peaks among those in their 30s, with the under 45s accounting for 59% of all purchases.
“Combined with the prospect of lower levels of house building, we expect that 2022 will represent a high watermark for the value of the nation’s housing stock for a few years.”
The figures compiled by the firm were for all homes including those owned outright or with a mortgage, as well as private- and social-rented properties.
Of the £8.7tn worth of residential property in the UK, just over
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