Speaking to a Bank Manager
the other day in Huddersfield, we got talking about the state of the Huddersfield
property market and whether we, as a Country, are turning more and more to the
European style of property ownership, where it is the norm to rent as a opposed
to automatically buying once you have a good job etc.
Even though a recent
report by the Halifax stated homeownership remains a goal for 85% of twenty to forty five
year olds, there is information emerging that attitudes in the UK towards
renting your own home as opposed to owning it have softened, showing more and
more, that renting is being seen as a life style choice. In fact it is recognised in learned circles
that the cycle of renting is also repeated by the fact that people who
grow up primarily in rented accommodation are themselves more likely to
rent than buy.
The biggest barrier often mentioned to buying a
house is the claim that they are not buying property at the moment
because of a lack of sufficient wages and by the high level of deposits but
in Huddersfield, if a couple, one on the average Huddersfield salary of £21,816 pa and the other on say the minimum wage, assuming they had a
reasonable credit history they would be showered with lenders offering them a 95% mortgage (a
reasonable credit history means they haven’t defaulted on loans, paid all their
bills on time nor got any County Court Judgements. Just because you missed just
one credit card payment won’t mean you have messed up your credit score and your
ability to get a mortgage) and they would need to find a sizeable, but
nothing stratospheric, £5,100 as a deposit to buy a decent two bed modern semi
detached house or larger (but older) top of the range 3 bed Victorian terraced
house ... it comes down to the perceived capability of the youngsters in Huddersfield to buy nowadays.
Interestingly, when I looked at the Huddersfield
figures, the average Huddersfield tenant has a slightly younger profile (especially
the sub 24 year old age range) than the English and Welsh average, as can be
seen from the graph below. What interested me as well was the relatively large
number of people renting over the age of 50! I know we have a large number of mature
tenants at our agency, but I always thought that was the exception to the rule.
Obviously not! (And that is good news
for landlords as they make excellent tenants)
So what does all this mean for Huddersfield
landlords and future Huddersfield landlords? I honestly believe there is a
difference between the hope and perceived capability of the younger
generation to buy a home. Although homeownership is seen as advantageous
by a majority, many tenants admitted in the Halifax report they are not taking
the steps they need to purchase their own home.
As the local authority aren’t building any
properties in Huddersfield, people still need a roof over the head, and that is
why, as I mentioned a few weeks ago in the Huddersfield Property Blog, the
demand for rental properties will only continue to steadily rise in the coming
decade. If want to know where the Huddersfield Property market is heading and
where you should (and shouldn’t buy), maybe the one place you should visit is
the Huddersfield Property Blog http://huddersfieldproperty.blogspot.co.uk/ or send me an email: chan.khangura@whitegates.co.uk
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