House sales surge after stamp duty is reduced
Government boost for property market saves average of £4,500, writes Vicky Shaw of PA
House sales increased by 15.6% month-on-month in August across the UK – but transactions were still down by 16.3% compared with the same month in 2019 – figures show.
HM Revenue and Customs ( HMRC) said an estimated 81,280 sales took place in August 2020.
On July 8, the threshold for stamp duty, which applies in England and Northern Ireland, was raised to £500,000.
The holiday means nine out of 10 people getting on or moving up the property ladder will pay no stamp duty, according to the Treasury.
The average saving has been put at £4,500.
Th eh mrc report said :“it’ s likely early impacts have been captured within provisional August 2020 transactions statistics.
“Similar measures were introduced in Scotland and Wales from July 15 2020 and July 27 2020 respectively.”
The Treasury said the stamp duty holiday, which will last until March 31 2021, has helped to protect nearly 750,000 jobs in the housing sector and wider supply chain.
House builders, estate agents, tradespeople, DIY stores, removal and cleaning firms could all benefit from the increased activity.
Chancellor Rishi Sunak said: “Owners doing up their homes to sell and buyers reinvesting stamp duty savings to make their new house feel like a home are also firing up local businesses, supporting, creating and protecting jobs across the country.”
Strict social distancing measures were introduced for the property market from March 26 due to the coronavirus pandemic. Measures were eased from May 13 in England, and the market gradually reopened later in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
SAVINGS
Mike Fairman, CEO at Checka trade, said: “Since the Government’s stamp duty changes came into effect earlier this year, we’ve seen record numbers of home improvement inquiries to the site suggesting that consumers are planning to reinvest their stamp duty savings straight back into their homes.”
Mark Harris, chief executive of mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said: “Despite only being introduced the previous month, the stamp duty holiday was already filtering through to transaction numbers in August as buyers rushed to take advantage of the saving.
“Despite the recovery in number of transactions compared with the previous month, the pandemic has had a significant impact on the market with August’s numbers down significantly on last year’s.
“The data illustrates just how long it takes for property transactions to complete and at the moment, with some lenders struggling with service levels, along with surveyors and lawyers, it is all taking longer than it usually would.
“Buyers need to be patient, as well as engage good advisers who can help steer the transaction through in as prompt a fashion as possible.”
Joshua Elash, director of property lender MT Finance, said: “The significant rise in house sales in August compared with the previous month reflects a positive response to the Chancellor’s stamp duty initiative in the short term but sadly, it is not sustainable.
“With the ongoing threat of further and more serious lockdowns looming, combined with the end of the furlough scheme in coming weeks, this may represent the peak of transactional activity before what will bean unpleasant fall in the final quarter of the year .”
Jeremy Leaf, a north London estate agent and a former residential chairman of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) said: “Transactions are a better barometer of market health than more volatile house prices…
“On the ground, we have noticed no sign of sales collapsing, renegotiating on deals or price reductions in the past few days – more of a determination to carry on.”
Nick eeming, chairman of Jackson-stops, said: “Our own data is inline with today’ s figures and shows a steady rise in market activity, with accepted offers and new listings up month-on-month across the Jackson-stops network.
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