Yes, that number is staggering isn’t it ….
Of the 16,453 households in Huddersfield where the head of the
household is 65 years or older, an astounding 12,254 (or 74.5%) of those are
owned, which is just about equal to the national average of 74.1%, which sounds
great – yet nothing could be further from the truth.
I chat with many Huddersfield pensioners who would like to move
but cannot, as there is a scarcity of such properties for Huddersfield mature
people to downsize into. Due to their scarcity and high demand, Huddersfield
bungalows on average get a 12% to 22% premium per square metre premium over
two storey properties. To add insult to
injury, a recent NHBC reported that only 1% of new builds in the Country were single
storey bungalows (compared to 7% in the mid 1990’s).
Huddersfield
OAP’s are sitting on £2,173.8m of equity in these Huddersfield homes
In a survey conducted a couple of years ago by YouGov, they established
that just over one third of homeowning people aged 65 and over in the Country
were looking to downsize into a smaller home. Yet, the Tory’s over the last
nine years have appeared to target all their attention on first-time buyers
with stratagems such as Starter Homes to safeguard the youngsters of the UK not
becoming perpetual members of ‘Generation Rent’. Equally
though, this doesn’t address the long-lasting under-supply of suitable
retirement housing essential to the needs of the Huddersfield’s hastily ageing
population. Lamentably, the Huddersfield’s
housing stock is tragically unprepared for this demographic shift to the 'overextended
middle age’, and this has created a new 'Generation Confined’ quandary where
older people cannot move.
Also,
those older Huddersfield retirees’ who do live in the limited number of Huddersfield
bungalows are finding it difficult to live on their own, as they are unable to
leave their bungalow because of a lack of sheltered housing and ‘affordable’
care home places.
Meaning those older Huddersfield retirees can't leave their Huddersfield
bungalows, younger Huddersfield retirees in their larger 2 storey family houses
can't buy those Huddersfield bungalows (occupied by the older retirees) and those
Huddersfield people in the 30’s and 40’s can't buy those larger 2 storey family
houses (occupied by the younger retirees) they need to for their growing
families ... it’s like everyone is waiting for everyone because of the
bottleneck at the top.
For those wanting to see the complete stats for Huddersfield as
whole …
Huddersfield OAP’s by Tenure of their Home
|
||||
Owned
|
Shared Ownership
|
Council Housing
|
Private Rented
|
Living Rent Free
|
74.5%
|
0.5%
|
17.2%
|
4.9%
|
3.0%
|
Huddersfield’s (and the rest of the UK’s) property prices have soared
over the last 50 years because the number of properties built has not kept up
with demand. With restrictive planning
regulations, migration, people living longer and excessive divorce rates
(meaning one family becomes two) we need, as a Country, 240,000 properties to be
built a year since the Millennium to just stand still.
At the turn of the Millennium, the Country was constructing on
average 180,000 to 190,000 households a year, that figure dropped in the five
years after the Credit Crunch to 135,000 and 145,000 households a year. Although we built 217,000 last year, we still
have all those 19 years to make up for.
The answer …. allow more land for starter homes, bungalows and
sheltered accommodation because land prices are stifling the property market
as the large building firms are more likely to focus on traditional houses and
apartments than bungalows (because they make more money from them).
My thoughts for the savvy Huddersfield property investors – until the Government change the planning
rules and allow more land to be built on – Bungalows, especially ones that need
some TLC after someone has passed away bungalows are a great bet for flipping
and even potential rental returns for future property investment as more and
more OAP’s will be renting in the decades to come?
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