Home PropertyAsking price to sold price gap grows even further year on year

Asking price to sold price gap grows even further year on year

18th Jul 24 12:53 pm

New data analysis fromย Yopa, the full-service estate agents, reveals that the gap between what sellers want for their home and what buyers are actually paying has increased by a further 1.1% in the past year to create a gap of -17.1%.

Yopa analysed the average asking price and average sold price* of homes in Britain that sold in July 2024 and compared it to the same data from one year ago in July 2023.

Sellers securing lower percentage of asking price versus a year ago

Yopaโ€™s analysis reveals that the average asking price of a home in Britain in July 2024 is ยฃ365,999. Meanwhile, the average sold price stands at ยฃ303,396. This means that homes are, on average, selling for -17.1% below asking price, equivalent to -ยฃ62,602.

The data also shows that the gap between asking price and sold price has increased by 1.1% since July 2023 when homes were selling for -16% below asking, as higher mortgage rates continue to impact the price buyers are able to pay versus the price expectations of the nationโ€™s sellers.

Wales home to the largest house price reductions

On a regional level, the largest deficit between asking price and sold price is found in Wales.

In Wales, the average asking price stands at ยฃ281,105, but homes are selling -24.2% below this figure at ยฃ213,147.

Homes in the North East are selling at an average of -22.8% below asking, followed by the West Midlands (-21.8%), Yorkshire & Humber (-21.4%), and the North West (-20.8%).

In fact, there are no regions in which sold prices are matching asking prices, with the smallest gap found in London where the difference stands at -7.4%.

North East sees largest increase in asking vs sold price gap

As for which regions have seen the largest annual increase in the gap between asking price and sold price, the North East tops the list.

July 2024โ€™s difference of -22.8% is 6.8% wider than the 2023 gap of -15.9%.

In Yorkshire & Humber, asking prices and actual sold prices have grown 3.3% further apart over the past year, while in the West Midlands, the gap has increased by 2.1%.

There is just one British region in which sold prices have grown closer to asking prices over the past year. The South Westโ€™s current difference of -19.1% is 0.5% narrower than July 2023โ€™s figure of -19.6%.

See how the gap between asking prices and sold prices looks in your local areaย here.

Yopaโ€™s National Franchise Director, Steve Anderson, said, โ€œWhilst market stability has improved since the decision to freeze the base rate in September of last year, itโ€™s clear that sellers remain largely over-confident when it comes to their asking price expectations versus the price they are actually able toย sell their property for.

In hot market conditions, itโ€™s not unusual for sold prices to exceed initial asking prices, but in the current market there simply isnโ€™t the required level of buyer demand to drive such price hikes.

This is largely down to the fact that mortgage rates remain substantially higher than weโ€™ve seen in previous years and so buyers simply arenโ€™t able to over-stretch when borrowing to put in a higher offer for their desired home.

The good news is, of course, that interest rates are forecast to fall before the year is out and, as they do, this should help drive buyer market activity to a greater extent and close the gap between asking prices and sold prices.โ€

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