More Rugeley homes are now coming up for sale.
This is excellent news for Rugeley homebuyers and Rugeley landlords because as properties are no longer flying off the shelf as they did last year, the number of properties available to buy is beginning to return to long-term averages.
This means there is greater choice for Rugeley buyers and this will reduce the pressure on Rugeley house prices and return us to a more normal Rugeley housing market for buyers (and sellers).
Falling Rugeley House Prices
The Winners & Losers
The doom and gloom of the national newspaper headlines regarding the UK property market would make you think Armageddon has arrived, this being the second most interesting topic to the Brits ( the first being the weather! ).
So, what is happening in the British property market? As with most things in life, the devil is in the detail.
To answer that big question in the title of the article (is now a good time to buy a Rugeley home?), it comes down to three things.
How much will you get for your Rugeley home when you sell it?
How much will you have to pay for your new home?
How much will that move cost you in ongoing monthly mortgage payments?
To answer points 1 and 2 correctly, I need to address point 3, which relates to interest rates.
The number of properties available to rent in Rugeley has dropped from 85 to 47 since February 2020
The average rent a tenant has had to pay in Rugeley has risen from £657 to £854 since February 2020
Many Rugeley landlords have cashedin on the post-lockdown property boom of the last 2 years and sold their properties to owner-occupiers and not fellow landlords
The supply of Rugeley rental property isn't nearly what it needs to be, which is of benefit to landlords not tenants
The Rugeley rental property shortage is currently very evident. In this article, I will investigate why there is such a significant lack of homes available for rent across Rugeley and what it means for buy-to-let investors.
I often get asked what is going to happen to Rugeley house prices.
Many things affect house prices, and it comes down to simple supply and demand.
On the supply side of the equation, in the short-term, the number of people wanting to sell their property at any one time has a massive effect on house prices.
Most Rugeley homeowners born before 1960 have been in their homes for more than 25 years.
Yet of all the properties sold in the UK since the first lockdown in the summer of 2020, 50% of those property owners had only been in their homes for six years and four months or less. That means we almost have a two speed housing market.
One market of homeowners in their 20s and 30s who move every four to five years and another property market of homeowners who, when they hit their late 40s, tend to stay put for decades. Yet now those mature homeowners, many of whom are retired and on fixed incomes with pensions, are finding it a lot more challenging to make ends meet with the cost-of-living crisis.
Evidence suggests nationally and locally, a lot of larger houses (property which tends to be owned by mature homeowners) have come onto the market in the last 12 months compared to the previous few years.