The latest analysis fromย Yopa, the full-service estate agents, has revealed that the nationโs homebuyers are benefitting from an increased degree of affordability due to strong earnings growth and a more subdued property market, as the house price to income ratio across the UK market has fallen for a second consecutive year.
The analysis comes from Yopaโsย Housing Market Affordability Review of the last decadeย which looks at the UK housing market over the last decade, how the cost of homeownership has changed, how this has impacted affordability for buyers when taking earnings into account, and just what costs attribute to the high cost of moving home.
The latest release from Yopaโsย Housing Market Affordability Review of the last decadeย looks at how the income to house price ratio for the average UK homebuyer has changed over the last decade, based on both the average UK earnings and the average UK house price.
The analysis shows that, today*, the average UK house price (ยฃ268,087) sits at 8.5 times the average gross UK earnings of ยฃ31,602.
Whilst this ratio is higher when compared to a decade ago, when it sat at 8 times income, the analysis by Yopa shows that UK homebuyers have been benefitting from an increased level of affordability in recent years.
In fact, since 2014, the house price to income ratio has been largely increasing year on year, peaking at 9.5 times income in 2022. However, since then it has fallen over the last two consecutive years, to 8.7 in 2023 and then to the 8.5 seen in 2024.
As it stands, there have been just two years over the last 10 when the income to house price ratio was lower than it is today – 2014 (8 times income) and 2015 (8.4 times income).
The reason for this improving level of homebuyer affordability has been both due to an underperforming property market and stronger earnings growth.
Just four of the last 10 years have seen the annual rate of earnings growth outpace house price increases and two of them have come over the last two years.
In 2023, house prices fell by -2.7%, whilst wages climbed by 6.3% and whilst house prices climbed by 4.6% in 2024, the annual rate of earnings growth sat at 7.1%.
This is a reversal of the trend seen over the majority of preceding years, with the worst being 2021 when the average earnings increased by just 0.4% versus a 7.3% annual jump in the average value of a home.
CEO of Yopa, Verona Frankish, said,โHouse price growth has been largely consistent over the last decade but whilst itโs one of the key contributing factors to the affordability picture, higher house prices donโt necessarily mean that homebuyers are worse off.
Earnings growth is also a driving factor and, in recent years, homebuyers have seen housing affordability worsen due to house price growth far outpacing the rate of increase seen with respect to the average income.
The good news is that over the last two years, this balance has swung back in favour of homebuyers, with consistently strong earnings growth and a subdued property market helping to re-level the playing field.
So whilst the average buyer still requires 8.5 times their income to cover the average cost of a home, this ratio has reduced over the last two years.โ
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