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UK households looking to sell house ‘this year’ urged to list property soon

Mortgages have surged by 30 per cent sparking hopes for a housing market revival. Figures produced by City watchdogs at the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) show the value of new home loans agreed by banks and building societies has surged more than 30 per cent.

This figure was up by 30.8 per cent on the previous quarter and by 31.2 per cent compared with the same period last year. Peter Stimson, Head of Product at the mortgage lender MPowered Mortgages, said: “While there’s more than a hint of the rear-view mirror about the FCA’s data, it does highlight the pent-up demand for mortgages.




“Levels of new lending grew in the first quarter of this year, but are still far below the numbers seen in 2022 when interest rates first started to rise. New mortgage commitments surged by 30.8 per cent compared to the final quarter of 2023 and were up 31.2 per cent on this time last year.

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“This jump in demand can be traced back to the flurry of mortgage rate reductions made by lenders at the start of 2024 in response to falling swap rates, which made borrowing cheaper and kick-started demand from many of the would-be homebuyers who sat out 2023.

“However the cost of borrowing has risen steadily since then, leading to a cooling of demand from movers and first-time buyers. Remortgages once again account for nearly a third of new lending to owner-occupiers. Whilst the Conservative Party manifesto contains a number of measures designed to make it easier for people to buy their first home, the key lever – interest rates – is outside Government control.”

Alice Haine, Personal Finance Analyst at Bestinvest by Evelyn Partners, said: “Critics could argue that such policies merely kick the can down the road, by potentially inflating house prices at the entry level and ignoring structural defects in the UK property market like a lack of new affordable homes and social housing.

“Rishi Sunak’s promise to abolish stamp duty land tax (SDLT) entirely for first-time buyers purchasing a home worth up to £425,000 appears to make it more affordable for young people to escape rapidly rising rents and secure their first home. However, the latest pledge mirrors the existing exemption for first-time buyers introduced in 2022 as temporary relief and which is set to end in March 2025.