Welsh first-time buyers struggle

Published on

Transactions in Wales during March were 5% lower than normal.

The latest LSL Property Services/Acadametrics survey for Wales found that the average house price in Wales has fallen by £419 in last 12 months.

The average house price is now £152,238.

The survey reported that rising inflation means house prices 3.9% lower in real terms since January 2011

“Many Welsh first time buyers are having real difficulties in securing a mortgage at an affordable rate,” said Richard Sexton, director of e.surv, part of LSL Property Services.

“The majority of them are being priced out of the market and forced to stay in expensive rental accommodation that is a black hole for their personal finances, making it even harder for them to save for a deposit.

“The lack of new buyers has caused house sales to drop well below their previous levels. It has put the brakes on activity further up the property ladder and caused the whole market to congeal. House prices are falling as a result. Adjusted for inflation, house prices have fallen by almost 4% in real terms since January last year.

“The underlying demand is there. People want to buy, but cannot because mortgage requirements are becoming steadily stricter. Banks are consciously reducing their lending to lower income buyers, hitting Welsh buyers disproportionately, and will continue to do so over the coming months. The eurozone crisis has made it much more expensive for banks to fund mortgages: they are covering off these extra costs by increasing rates and reducing the number of mortgages they grant to buyers with small deposits.

“Things are unlikely to get much better over this year. House prices will be closely tied to events across the Channel. If the problems blighting the eurozone become more pronounced, banks and building societies will have to scale back their mortgage lending even further. This will reduce sales yet further and knock chunks off the average house price.

“On a local level, the fortunes of house prices are heavily dependent on the performance of their immediate economies and, in Wales, this will particularly be influenced by the impact of public sector austerity and the threat of unemployment.”

COMMENT ON MORTGAGE SOUP

We want to hear from you!
Leave a comment and get the conversation started.
You need to register to post, so please login or sign up below.

Latest articles

NPS Law joins My Legal Club conveyancing panel

NPS Law has joined My Legal Club’s UK conveyancing panel following a review of...

Barclays loosens affordability rules for residential and buy-to-let borrowers

Barclays has changed its affordability calculations for residential and buy-to-let mortgages, in a move...

Conveyancing fees tick up in Q1 but remain flat over past 12 months

The cost of conveyancing services rose modestly in the first quarter of 2026, although...

Bath BS introduces valuation engine to speed up mortgage decisions

Bath Building Society has launched a new property decisioning engine aimed at cutting delays...

LSL to stage first protection-only conference for advisers

LSL Financial Services is to hold its first conference dedicated solely to protection, in...

Latest publication

Other news

NPS Law joins My Legal Club conveyancing panel

NPS Law has joined My Legal Club’s UK conveyancing panel following a review of...

Barclays loosens affordability rules for residential and buy-to-let borrowers

Barclays has changed its affordability calculations for residential and buy-to-let mortgages, in a move...

Conveyancing fees tick up in Q1 but remain flat over past 12 months

The cost of conveyancing services rose modestly in the first quarter of 2026, although...