A man and a woman looking at listings in an estate agent's window
November 22, 2024

Market Report November 2024 – Buyers sit tight

Housing market activity slowed last month as buyers and sellers awaited the Budget, and rental growth may also be losing momentum.

Growth in prices and number of transactions slowed last month as buyers and sellers awaited the Budget, and the end-of-year slowdown in the sales market now appears to be in full effect. Rental growth may also be losing momentum.

  • The Bank of England cut interest rates from 5% to 4.75% this month, the lowest they have been since June 2023. But forecasters now expect them to fall more slowly than previously predicted, and commercial lenders have been increasing their rates.
  • The housing market is moving more quickly than in 2023. HMRC reported 91,820 transactions in September, up 9% compared to September 2023. However, this only represented a 1% increase compared to August, suggesting that buyers were sitting tight before the Budget.
  • Nationwide’s statistics show that house price growth slowed in October. Prices were up 2.4% year on year, compared to a 3.2% year-on-year increase in September. The average non-seasonally adjusted house price was £265,738.
  • Halifax puts the October figure higher than Nationwide: 3.9% year on year, taking the average house price to £293,999. But like Nationwide, Halifax reports that growth is down from last month. The building society’s September House Price Index measured 4.7% year-on-year growth.
  • Rightmove found a much higher October average price of £371,958, but also reported year-on-year growth of just 1.0%. The platform further reports a 29% year-on-year rise in the number of sales agreed, and a 12% increase in the number of listings.
  • Rental growth has been a lot stronger than house price growth, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). They report that rents increased by 8.7% in the 12 months to October 2024, up from 8.4% in September. The fastest growing region was London, where average rents grew by 10.4%.
  • Rightmove’s quarterly Rental Trends Tracker for Q3 (July-September) reports 5.2% year-on-year rental growth outside London, with the average rent reaching £1,344. This is the slowest growth recorded since 2021. In contrast to the ONS statistics, they found that rents in the capital grew by just 2.5% year on year, but hit an average of £2,627.
  • According to Rightmove, the slowdown in rental growth is because of a closer balance between rental supply and demand. Rental supply has increased 13% year-on-year. Properties are receiving an average of 15 enquiries, down from 23 a year earlier.

Growth in prices and number of transactions slowed last month as buyers and sellers awaited the Budget, and the end-of-year slowdown in the sales market now appears to be in full effect. Rental growth may also be losing momentum.

  • The Bank of England cut interest rates from 5% to 4.75% this month, the lowest they have been since June 2023. But forecasters now expect them to fall more slowly than previously predicted, and commercial lenders have been increasing their rates.
  • The housing market is moving more quickly than in 2023. HMRC reported 91,820 transactions in September, up 9% compared to September 2023. However, this only represented a 1% increase compared to August, suggesting that buyers were sitting tight before the Budget.
  • Nationwide’s statistics show that house price growth slowed in October. Prices were up 2.4% year on year, compared to a 3.2% year-on-year increase in September. The average non-seasonally adjusted house price was £265,738.
  • Halifax puts the October figure higher than Nationwide: 3.9% year on year, taking the average house price to £293,999. But like Nationwide, Halifax reports that growth is down from last month. The building society’s September House Price Index measured 4.7% year-on-year growth.
  • Rightmove found a much higher October average price of £371,958, but also reported year-on-year growth of just 1.0%. The platform further reports a 29% year-on-year rise in the number of sales agreed, and a 12% increase in the number of listings.
  • Rental growth has been a lot stronger than house price growth, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). They report that rents increased by 8.7% in the 12 months to October 2024, up from 8.4% in September. The fastest growing region was London, where average rents grew by 10.4%.
  • Rightmove’s quarterly Rental Trends Tracker for Q3 (July-September) reports 5.2% year-on-year rental growth outside London, with the average rent reaching £1,344. This is the slowest growth recorded since 2021. In contrast to the ONS statistics, they found that rents in the capital grew by just 2.5% year on year, but hit an average of £2,627.
  • According to Rightmove, the slowdown in rental growth is because of a closer balance between rental supply and demand. Rental supply has increased 13% year-on-year. Properties are receiving an average of 15 enquiries, down from 23 a year earlier.