Tag Archives: extensions

It takes almost a year to settle into a home in the UK, survey finds

Most Britons take almost a year to fully settle into a new home with unfinished packing and decorating delaying the process, new research shows. Over half, some 51%, still have unpacking to 304 days after moving and three quarters of slow unpackers admit to being stressed about unfinished unpacking and half of those saying it has caused arguments. One in four have at least one mystery box that remained packed since their last move and non-essential kitchen equipment such as sandwich toasters and cocktail shakers are most likely remain boxed. Kettles, phone and tablet chargers and bathroom essentials are first to be unboxed, according to the research from London removals and storage firm Kiwi Movers. Waiting to decorate is the most common excuse for not unpacking fully and people aged between 30 and 35 most likely to take the task somewhat slowly. The research also found that 75% of those who hadn’t fully unpacked after 10 months of later said that they found having belongings still in boxes stressful, while half of those said the boxes had started to cause arguments. Some 18% of movers said it took them between 12 and 18 months to get things fully organised, while a small minority of seven percent said they still had things in boxes after two years of living somewhere. At the other end of the spectrum, a super organised and motivated 3% claimed to have fully unpacked within a day of moving in, while seven percent said they’d got the job done within a week. The biggest cause for failing to unpack was the need to decorate, with 44% of respondents saying they’d planned to unpack once they’d completed decorating tasks while 31% said the delay in unpacking was due to having insufficient storage, while 12% said they couldn’t agree with their significant other on where to put things. Some 13% blamed themselves, with 7% saying they were too busy to fully unpack and 6% admitting to being too lazy to finish the job and men living on their own are the most likely to have full boxes lying around, with 79% saying they still had unpacking to do by month ten in their new pad. Single women were far less likely to let their belongings gather dust, with just 21% with unpacking after 10 months. Single women were also most likely to get the job done inside week one, with 20% claiming to have successfully found a home for all of their belongings. Regan McMillan, director of Kiwi Movers believes a lot of movers are making their lives unnecessarily hard by packing items they don’t actually need. ‘If a quarter of people are saying they’ve got boxes they never unpacked since their last move, you’ve got to wonder if they really need what’s inside,’ he said. ‘We recommend having… Continue reading

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UK homes market sees more properties coming up for sale online

The number of UK home owners putting their properties on the market online has increased by 7.1% in the past month compared to the previous month, the latest research shows. Some 67% of major towns and cities in the UK have seen a rise in the number of new properties being marketed in the same period, according to the data from online estate agents House Simple. The index, compiled from the number of new properties listed every week on the property portal Rightmove in more than 100 major towns and cities across the UK and all the London boroughs, also shows that although new stock levels remain low overall across the country, home owners are finally starting to put their homes on the market. The largest increases in new listings in the past month compared to the previous month was in Swindon with growth of 47.3% followed by Liverpool and Leicester, both at 30.4%, then Lancaster at 24.3% and Sunderland at 22%. Next came Halifax at 21.1%, Coventry at 21.1%, Hereford at 19%, Lincoln at 17.6% and Oxford and Dundee both at 17.5%. These towns and cities were followed by Edinburgh and Blackpool at 17.2%, Hartlepool at 17.1% and Bolton at 16.3%. The figures also reveal a distinct north/south divide, with home owners in the north of England and Scotland appearing to be more active in June and July in marketing their properties. Nine out of 15 of the new property listings risers are in the north of England or Scotland, while four towns/cities in the Midlands also feature in the list. Winchester saw the biggest drop in new properties coming onto the market in the past month compared to the previous month with a fall of 17.9%, followed by Hull down by 13.7%, Doncaster down by 12.5% and Cambridge down by 8.7%. Next came Nottingham with a fall of 8.1%, Torquay at 7.6%, Grimsby at 6.2%, Norwich at 5.8% and Glasgow at 5.7%. The London property market has slowed in recent months. However, Rightmove figures analysed by HouseSimple reveal that the capital has seen an 8.1% increase in new properties being listed in the past month compared to the previous month. Some 78.1% of London boroughs have seen an increase in new properties being marketed in the past month and the biggest rise was in the City and Westminster at 29.5%, Islington at 28.8% and Southwark at 27.1%. Meanwhile the biggest fallers have been Bromley, down 11.2%, Kingston upon Thames down 6.6% and Havering down 4.4%. ‘A stampede of sellers coming to market was expected after the General Election result, but that stampede never materialised. In fact, for the first few weeks there appeared to be a fair amount of caution and reluctance amongst sellers to market,’ said Alex Gosling, chief executive officer of House Simple. ‘This may have been a case of waiting to see if property prices might start to rise rapidly with the confidence generated by a stable, majority government. Now it… Continue reading

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Extensions and alterations add £6.5 billion to the value of UK homes

Home owners in the UK have added an estimated £6.5 billion to the value of the country’s housing stock in the 12 months to March 2015, according to new research. Some 220,000 owner occupiers in the UK extended or altered their home in past year, equivalent to one in 74 home owners, the report from international real estate adviser Savills also shows. Based on the assumption that the average extension or alteration adds 10% to the value of the average home, this would create an average uplift of £30,000 per property, the report points out. By contrast mortgaged home movers are still only at half the level they were 10 years ago pre credit crunch, at 358,400 in the year to the end of March 2015, according to data from the Council of Mortgage Lenders (CML). ‘The cost of taking the next step up the housing ladder and the difficulties in acquiring the mortgage finance to do so appear to have encouraged a significant proportion of owner occupiers to extend or alter their existing home,’ said Lucian Cook, head of Savills UK residential research. ‘Changes made by the mortgage market review and increased stamp duty for properties over £1 million are both likely catalysts to home improvements, impeding the rate and volume of transactions in the market,’ he added. The report also suggest that there is a far greater propensity to alter or extend in high value markets. Savills estimates one in 44 home owners did so in London the year to end March 2015, while £3.6 billion of the £6.5 billion was added to the value of housing stock of London and the South East. ‘High value markets have generally been the strongest performers post credit crunch. Extending has therefore been both more financially viable, with owners recouping the money spent on home improvements through house price growth and more attractive given the relative costs of upsizing,’ said Cook. The research also shows that Hammersmith and Fulham and Kensington and Chelsea top the list of local authorities with the highest propensity to extend, both creating an uplift in property values of over £100 million before fixtures and fittings are taken into account. Beyond London, areas such as St Albans, Cambridge, Winsor and Maidenhead and Guildford have all seen significant numbers of home owners extending their home. Continue reading

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