House Prices Fall As Stamp Duty
Holiday Ends
UK House prices dropped
by 0.5% in June just as the long stamp duty holiday began to be phased out,
according to the Halifax.
Annual property prices
still rose 8.8%, resulting in average prices more than £21,000 higher, which is
more than most people saved on stamp duty in the mad scramble to buy a home. The
average price of a UK property according to the lender is now £260,358.
The Government
removed the need to pay stamp duty on some properties for much of the pandemic
in a bid to stimulate the market in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The move worked, but
critics argue that it caused price inflation and could created a property
bubble if demand falls.
Mortgage lenders, like
the Halifax and Nationwide, long with estate agents are confident that,
"The power of home movers to drive the market won't fade entirely as the
economy recovers”.
Demand remains high
among buyers seeking larger family homes with the average price of a detached
property climbing faster than any other type over the past 12 months - shooting
up by more than 10% or almost £47,000 in cash terms.
Detached homes now
cost on average more than half a million pounds, £200,000 more expensive than
the typical semi-detached house.
Double tax on holiday
homes
A Welsh local
authority plans to double council tax on second homes in order to deter the
growing number of English buyers snapping up seaside holiday homes on the coast
of Wales.
Owners of holiday
homes and empty properties in Gwynedd will be hit with double council tax from
next month after Councillors backed the increase in premium from the current
50%. The tax could raise an extra £3m a year for social housing.
More than one in ten
houses in Gwynedd was now classed as a second home.
Councillors in the
larger city of Swansea are planning a similar tax hike.
Buyers, presumably priced
out of the more expensive Devon and Cornwall, have been buying up properties in
Welsh beauty spots. The effect of this prices locals out of the market and destroys
local village life where properties are only used at weekends.
Councils have powers
to increases local taxes on empty properties and second homes.
Cheap money also
fuelling the bubble?
There is a buy-to-let
mortgage available through the NRLA offering a 2 year fixed rate of 1.25%, with
free legal fees and a £250 cashback! You could borrow a million pound on
interest only and the mortgage payment would be just over £1000 per month. You
couldn’t rent a million-pound home for that.
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