There are 28.4m households in Britain, of which 17,693,200 are owned, worth a total of £5,127,807,837,600 (£5.1 trillion). When you add all the private rented homes and council houses, that figure reaches just over £8.5 trillion!
Over the last six years, 76,669 UK properties have
sold each month, meaning the average British homeowner moves every 16 years and
7 months.
This data disproves a standard theory that
British neighbourhoods are becoming more fleeting and transitory. On the face
of it, they show that once you have bought a property you can call home, there
isn’t much motivation to move again.
So, are fewer people moving home?
Could it be attributed to a sense of contentment
or indifference to moving home?
While we might love our home in Medway,
most of you (including myself) still want to 'better ourselves' with a bigger
house, better area, etc, which typically requires us to climb the Medway
property ladder.
Yet, with Medway house prices having risen by 506% since 1995,
the cost of going up the next rung on the Medway property ladder is prohibitive.
Everyone remembers the 1980s when we had a buoyant
booming property market as a backcloth; British homeowners moved home every
eight or nine years; so now, with the average at just over 16 years, this means
each British homeowner moving around two or three times in their adult homeownership
lifetime. Maybe we should all rename our homes ‘Dun-Roamin’! Or does it?
We have all heard the phrase, “lies, damn
lies and statistics”.
The statistics mentioned above conceal some
astounding features of the British property market. When British homeowners
enter their late 50s and early 60s, their inclination to move home drops
tremendously. The average length of time a homeowner without a mortgage
moves home is 23 years and 3 months (and around seven out of ten outright
homeowners, i.e. without a mortgage, are 65 years old or older).
Yet, British homeowners (with a mortgage) move on
average every 9 years and 11 weeks.
So, whilst I cannot determine who has a
mortgage and who doesn't, I can look at how quickly people move home in Medway.
I have looked at the last 40 property sales in Medway and found some
interesting findings.
The average Medway homeowner moves on
average every 14 years and 37 weeks.
Remember, the UK average is every 16 years
and 7 months. Yet it gets fascinating when we delve deeper into that stat.
There seems to be a two-speed (even
three-speed) Medway property market (remember in the title I said 8 years and 8
weeks).
To start, having looked at the last 40 Medway
property sales I then put them in order of how long they had been in that home
before they moved, with the fastest first and slowest at the end.
When we look at the 25% quickest home
movers in Medway (i.e. 1st to 10th) and then the next
slice (the 11th to 20th quickest movers) … these Medway
home movers are moving home really fast, yet the gap for the successive two
slices broadens remarkably, (i.e. the slowest movers). See for yourself!
· The quickest 25% of Medway home movers (i.e. 1st
to 10th) moves every 4 years & 0 weeks – that’s a quick move!
· The next fastest quartile (i.e. 11th
to 20th) of Medway home movers moves every 8 years & 46 weeks.
· The following 25% quickest quartile
(i.e. 21st to 30th) of Medway home movers moves every 18
years & 36 weeks.
·
Finally, the 25% slowest quartile (i.e. 31st
to 40th) of Medway home movers only moves every 27 years & 15
weeks.
Looking at the top 50% of the quickest
movers, half of Medway homeowners move home again within 8 years and 8 weeks.
When looking at the properties that fall
into the later bands (i.e. the ones that don’t move/sell so often), they tend
to be the larger properties where the homeowners have lived for 30 years plus.
We all should learn that once people get
into their 50s and 60s, their tendency to move home drops significantly. This
means the properties on the lower rungs of the Medway property ladder sell more
often (as younger homeowners occupy them). Yet, once Medway homeowners get
older, their inclination to move home diminishes. This obstructs the younger Medway
generation wanting to buy the bigger Medway homes these mature homeowners live
in.
What is stopping the older generation homeowners
from selling and downsizing to free up family homes for families that
desperately need them? Some of it will be apathy, some will hold on to the
homes they brought their families up in, or there might be another reason.
However, when you consider …
50.2% of owned homes in Britain have
two or more spare bedrooms.
That’s a lot of spare bedrooms, at least
15,553,574 spare bedrooms, not being used in the UK.
As a country, we need to change how we can support
older homeowners in selling their large, underutilised homes to allow them to
house the younger families that badly need them. Some people suggest tax
breaks, yet the Government aren’t in the mood to give massive tax breaks to
people who would 'tend' to be their existing voter base. Much of it comes down
to not finding the right home to move to.
As a nation, we have seen (and will
continue to see) a lot of socio-economic and demographic changes together with
a rising elderly population, so it’s not just about how many homes we build but
whether we are building the right kind of homes the older generation want to
move into.
Interesting times ahead for the Medway
property market!
If you are a mature Medway homeowner in a
large home and are afraid to move because you can't find one, please don't
hesitate to contact me. I might be able to place your Medway home on the market
without a for sale board or internet listing and find you a buyer who is
prepared to wait for you to find one. If this interests you, without obligation
do not hesitate to pick up the phone.

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