Birmingham Post

House prices slip after changes to stamp duty

- Vicky Shaw Special Correspond­ent

THE average UK house price slipped by 0.5% in June as the full stamp duty holiday came to an end, according to an index.

It marked the first monthly fall since January, indicating that the peak of buyer demand is now likely to have passed, according to the research from Halifax.

But typical property values were still more than £21,000 higher than a year earlier, the bank said.

The price drop in June meant annual house price inflation eased back slightly from May’s 14-year high of 9.6% to 8.8%.

Across the UK, the average house price in June was £260,358. In the West Midlands the average house price was £221,661 just over 8.1 up on last year.

The stamp duty holiday in England and Northern Ireland is now being tapered, before being phased out completely in the autumn.

The “nil rate” stamp duty band shrank from £500,000 to £250,000 from July 1, prompting a rush of buyers trying to beat the deadline, and it will revert to its normal level of £125,000 from October 1.

Russell Galley, managing director, Halifax said: “With the stamp duty holiday now being phased out, it was predicted the market might start to lose some steam entering the latter half of the year, and it’s unlikely that those with mortgages approved in the early months of summer expected

to benefit from the maximum tax break, given the time needed to complete transactio­ns.

“That said, with the tapered approach, those purchasing at the current average price of £260,358 would still only pay about £500 in stamp duty at today’s rates, increasing to around £3,000 when things return to normal from the start of October.

“Government support measures over the last year have helped to boost demand, particular­ly amongst buyers searching for larger family homes at the upper end of the market.

Indeed, the average price of a detached home has risen faster than any other property type over the past 12 months, up by more than 10% or almost £47,000 in cash terms.

“At a cost of over half a million pounds, they are now £200,000 more expensive than the typical semidetach­ed house.

“That power of home-movers to drive the market, as people look to find properties with more space, spurred on by increased time spent at home during the pandemic, won’t fade entirely as the economy recovers.

“Coupled with buyers chasing the relatively small number of available properties, and continued low borrowing rates, it’s a trend which can sustain high average prices for some time to come.”

Mr Gardner said of UK house prices: “We would still expect annual growth to have slowed somewhat more by the end of the year, with unemployme­nt expected to edge higher as job support measures unwind, and the peak of buyer demand now likely to have passed.”

Tomer Aboody, director of property lender MT Finance, said: “Even though property price increases in London have been less stellar than elsewhere, prices are still at their highest in the capital and continue to rise, putting property ownership further beyond the reach of firsttime buyers in particular.”

Anna Clare Harper, chief executive of property consultanc­y SPI Capital, said: “The tapering down of the temporary stamp duty reduction takes the pressure off demand.

“However, supply is still constraine­d, constructi­on is getting harder and more expensive, and a mass sell-off from property owners is unlikely in the absence of significan­t interest rate rises.”

Mark Harris, chief executive of mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said: “Cheap borrowing and affordabil­ity will continue to give buyers more purchase power, and result in continued demand, even if the peak of the market has passed.”

 ??  ?? In the West Midlands the average house price was £221,661
In the West Midlands the average house price was £221,661

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