British home prices will rise modestly this year and increase faster than overall inflation in the next two years, according to housing market specialists polled by Reuters, supported by expected reductions in borrowing costs and a dearth of supply.
The 1.8% increase predicted for 2024 will be outpaced by wage growth. Coupled with an expected fall in mortgage rates, all 19 respondents to an extra question said purchasing affordability for first-time buyers would improve over the coming year.
“Stable house prices combined with real income growth should aid affordability this year,” said Aneisha Beveridge, head of research at estate agency Hamptons.
While prospective buyers may be better able to finance a purchase, supply remains a problem, especially for entry-level homes.
All 17 specialists answering another question said the supply of affordable homes would fall short of demand over the coming two to three years, including 11 who predicted it would be far short.
“Construction is throttled by a lack of positive sentiment among developers. They will only build again when there are sure signs of market and political stability,” said property consultant Russell Quirk.
Earlier this year, major housebuilders cut their building targets. Persimmon (PSN.L), opens new tab last month said it was confident for the rest of 2024, while Taylor Wimpey (TW.L), opens new tab posted an improvement in its sales rate but both left their building targets unchanged.
The government should get more involved in improving affordability, according to 13 of 16 respondents to an extra question.
Reducing housing taxes, encouraging office conversions, loosening planning restrictions and expanding shared equity initiatives were some of the ideas mooted.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak last week called a national election for July 4 and is lagging Keir Starmer’s Labour Party in polls.
Neither party has yet published their manifestos and some regular contributors declined to participate in the Reuters poll this quarter.
“With little consensus about how to best resolve the housing crisis, it is likely that, even under a new Labour government, the gap between supply and demand will continue to widen for the foreseeable future,” said David Rees at estate agency Chestertons.
After rising 1.8% this year, home prices will increase 3.1% next year and 4.0% in 2026, median forecasts in the May 9-29 poll of 22 specialists showed. 2024 forecasts ranged from a 4.0% drop to a 4.0% increase.
In a February poll, the respective annual forecasts were for no change, 3.0% and 4.0%.
That is a long way short of the pandemic boom time when home prices soared 25% between February 2020 and September 2022 as buyers searched out more space and took advantage of record low interest rates.
“Reflecting the sluggish economic outlook, projections for house prices over the next three years are similarly subdued, although deeper interest rate cuts or tax incentives could quickly change this,” Chestertons’ Rees added.
Bank Rate, currently 5.25%, will be 4.50% at the end of this year and 3.50% at end-2025, a separate Reuters poll found, still a far cry from the record low 0.1% during the pandemic era.
In London, a magnet for foreign investors, prices were expected to rise 1.8% this year, 3.9% next and 4.9% in 2026 – an increase from February’s survey.