Tag Archives: crisis

£26 million fund announced to boost UK starter home programme

A £26 million fund for house builders in the UK has been launched to pave the way for the first wave of new starter homes aimed at first time buyers. Communities Secretary Greg Clark said high quality homes will be available for first time buyers and the fund will make sure that a range of different types of properties can be accessed. The fund will support architects, developers, councils, housing associations and small builders to build properties that will increase the quality of design as the government delivers on its pledge to build 200,000 starter homes by 2020. It will be used to acquire brownfield sites to provide land for starter homes. Money from the sales of these sites will go back to the government, securing good value for the taxpayer. In a further move to support aspiring home owners the government has also made available up to £10 million for local authorities to prepare more brownfield land for development of starter homes. ‘We are committed to delivering 200,000 starter homes by the end of this Parliament, providing a real boost to aspiring young first time buyers. This competitive fund will build homes that will clearly show the wide range of new properties that will be available for first-time buyers as they take their first step on the housing ladder,’ said Clark. ‘We are also helping bring back into use more brownfield land for development, keeping the country building and delivering the homes our communities need,’ he added. Helping young people achieve their dream of home ownership is a priority for the government, according to Housing Minister Brandon Lewis who added that already more than 100,000 households have been helped to buy a home through the flagship Help to Buy scheme and starter homes should be another game changer. ‘This fund will help kick start that change and show young people across the country the quality they can expect when they buy a starter home. It’s further proof that this government’s long term economic plan is on track,’ he added. The Homes and Communities Agency (HCA), said it will support the starter home initiative by offering its land and development expertise and this will help even more first time buyers into affordable home ownership. ‘We look forward to working with our key delivery partners including councils, developers, housing associations, small builders and architects in taking this forward, through the identification and purchase of land suitable for exemplar starter home sites,’ said HCA chief executive Andy Rose. According to Stephen Stone, chief executive of construction firm Crest Nicholson, the announcement will not only help first time buyers get onto the property ladder, but it will also accelerate further output across the industry at a time when housing need is at an all time high. The government’s new Housing Bill and proposed national planning policy changes will introduce a series of planning reforms that will ensure hundreds of thousands of starter homes will be built. These include requiring local… Continue reading

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UK properties with an address in a lane are much more expensive, new research shows

UK home owners in a street with the name ‘lane’ have a property worth over £100,000 more than those on a ‘street’ according to new research. The data, generated by findings provided by property market specialists Hometrack shows that the first line of an address really can say something about the value of a home. The results of the research by Barclays Mortgages show that while homes on lanes have an average property value of £245,906, some 22% higher than the national average while homes on streets come towards the bottom of the list with properties averaging £142,374 or 29% under the national average and 42% below lanes. After lanes the next most expensive addresses are found in ways and roads with average values of £218,742 and £212,717 respectively, followed by closes and avenues at £204,964 and £192,344. Regionally, there’s also some significant variation revealed by the figures. The biggest divide in direct cost between street name prices occurs in the South East, where properties on lanes are an average of £137,145 more expensive than those on streets. The most pronounced gap in price in relative terms is actually in Wales, with properties on streets barely reaching half the value of those on lanes with a price difference of 53%. By contrast, the region with the least fluctuation in price is the East of England, where prices vary between the above street names by just 36%. Comparing this to data released in 2001, all of the street names have massively increased in average value in the last 15 years. The average price for a lane property has doubled, from approximately £123,000 in 2001 to the £246,000 of last year, while even streets have jumped up from £92,000 to £142,000. ‘As this data highlights, the last few years have been incredibly buoyant for the housing market and economy, and this is great news for buyers and sellers across the nation,’ said Craig Calder, Barclays Director of Mortgages. ‘While this data paints a clear picture of victory for ‘lanes it’s interesting to see the varying statistics from around the country, and a huge growth in value overall,’ he added. Continue reading

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Number of people moving home in UK falls in first half of 2015

The number of home movers in the UK in the first six months of 2015 was 9% lower than in the same period in 2014, new research has found. Despite this decline, the number of movers in the first half of 2015 was 32% higher than in the same period in 2009 at the depth of the housing market recession, according to the latest Lloyds Bank home movers review. It explains that the rise in house prices over the past few years has boosted home owners’ equity in their current homes making it easier for them to fund a deposit towards the purchase of their next property. Notwithstanding the improvement since 2009, the number of home movers in the first half of this year was less than half the total in the first six months of 2007 when it was 327,600. The research also shows that the percentage decline in the number of home movers between the first halves of 2014 and 2015 was closely in line with the 10% fall in first time buyers. First time buyer numbers have, however, risen significantly more quickly than home movers over the last few years. As a result, home movers have declined as a proportion of all new mortgage financed home purchasers from 72% in 2004 to 54% in 2015. ‘There was a modest decline in the number of home movers in the first half of the year compared with 2014, which was in line with the general softening in housing market activity,’ said Andrew Mason, Lloyds Bank mortgages director. ‘Whilst the number of home movers has risen significantly since 2009, it remains well below previous levels and has recovered less strongly than first time buyer numbers. This is likely to partly reflect the high costs associated with moving home, as well as highlighting the difficulties that homeowners can face in finding somewhere suitable to move to due to the shortage of properties available for sale,’ he added. The figures show that the average price paid by a home mover has grown by 25% over the past five years from £208,654 in 2010 to £261,524 in 2015, an increase of £52,869, equivalent to a monthly rise of £881. Home mover property prices have increased by 6%over the past year. The average deposit put down by a home mover in 2015 was £87,954, some 8% higher than in 2014 or £81,549. This equates to 34% of the average price paid by home movers of £261,524. Regionally, home movers in London put down the largest average deposit at £175,273 or 36% of the average property value of £492,882. This is more than four times the average deposit put down by home movers in Northern Ireland where it was £43,625 and the lowest. Nationally, the recent changes to the Stamp Duty system have saved the average home mover £4,769, reducing the tax bill for someone buying the average priced home mover property of £261,524 from £7,845 to… Continue reading

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