Yorkshire Post - Property

My prediction­s for the prime selling season

- Tim Waring HEAD OF RESIDENTIA­L AT LISTER HAIGH, HARROGATE www.listerhaig­h.co.uk

Finally there is light at the end of the tunnel and this time not another lockdown train coming in the other direction. Poetic prose I know and maybe not surprising for an estate agent, but I am sure it reflects the thoughts of many following the Government’s announceme­nt on Monday evening.

So, where does this leave the housing market as we head towards what is traditiona­lly the prime selling season?

There is nothing traditiona­l about what has been happening of late, of that there is no doubt.

Yet with the market allowed to remain open in recent months and stimulated by the stamp duty holiday, will this all come crashing down as we return to normality, whatever that proves to be in the longer term?

Well, I am firmly in the “No” camp, and for good reason. It does not require complicate­d economic theories nor ground-breaking statistics.

Surely, it’s simply common sense that after almost 12 months of restrictio­n, no one wants a depressed housing market, nor is it in anybody’s interest for it to happen.

So with this in mind and showing deference to a certain Mr Johnson’s proposals on Monday night, for those contemplat­ing selling, I give you my personal four step property road map as we head out of what is hopefully the final lockdown.

Step One, part 1: As vaccines protect people, maintenanc­e and repair protects property. So, with the “stay at home” dictum remaining in place, and if the children are back at school, maybe the next five weeks really is the time to get your house in order. I know I have said it many times before, but this year perhaps there are fewer excuses for not doing it.

Step One, part 2: With certain outdoor activities to be allowed from the end of March and a limited number of people allowed into your garden, April could be the month for getting said garden sorted. I foresee much jet washing of patios over the Easter holiday.

Step Two: From mid April, all being well, shops and many other businesses described as nonessenti­al will be reopening. After so much constraint in recent months, surely the feelgood factor will start to return and quickly... and the many who have put their house moving plans on hold over the last year will soon start coming out of the woodwork as well. Plus, if you have a holiday let, you are back in business as well.

Step Three: It is mid May and you will be glad you did the patio. Garden parties for up to 30 people will be on the cards and potentiall­y the meeting of six people inside (or two households) might be relaxed as well. Pubs and restaurant­s will start to reopen, likewise other leisure activities and potentiall­y overseas travel as well.

Step Four: Dare one say a return to normality? There are many potential pitfalls to getting there, but if we all “do our bit” as they say, it’s very achievable.

The property market thrives on confidence, and if these steps don’t create a feelgood factor and enthusiasm for our passion of home ownership, especially after all we have collective been through in the last year, then what will?

How about an extension of the stamp duty holiday? As I write speculatio­n grows as to what Mr Sunak will say in his Budget but it is likely something will happen, so good news? Who said spring was not traditiona­lly the best time to be selling your home?

■ Tim Waring, FRICS, is Head of Residentia­l at Lister Haigh in Harrogate.

 ??  ?? FUTURE: Springtime looks like being traditiona­lly buoyant as we inch out of Covid restrictio­ns, says Tim Waring.
FUTURE: Springtime looks like being traditiona­lly buoyant as we inch out of Covid restrictio­ns, says Tim Waring.

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