Is
Huddersfield’s Housing Market Broken for First-Time Buyers?
As summer 2025 approaches, many
first-time buyers in Huddersfield are asking a tough question: Is
getting on the property ladder even possible anymore? With
average deposits now hitting a jaw-dropping £61,000, it’s no wonder so
many feel locked out.
Add in soaring rents and rising living
costs, and you've got a storm that’s wiping out savings faster than
buyers can build them. The usual advice—save more, spend less, be patient—feels
tone-deaf when house prices keep climbing faster than wages.
The go-to affordability metric, the house
price-to-earnings ratio (HPER), certainly paints a stark
picture. In 1983, homes in Yorkshire and the Humber cost just 2.66 times
the average salary. Today, that figure is 3.75—meaning homes are nearly
four times more expensive relative to income than they were 40 years ago.
But before we accept that things are
hopeless, it’s worth digging a little deeper.
Are Things
Really That Bad?
Let’s look at some actual numbers.
The average price for a first-time buyer
home in Huddersfield today is £148,700. Thanks
to 95% mortgage deals, many buyers only need a 5% deposit—around
£7,435. On a typical 29-year mortgage at 4.29%, that
translates to monthly repayments of £710.14.
That’s not insignificant—but it’s also
not the full story.
The HPER gives a broad view of how house
prices compare to incomes—but it doesn't tell you how
much of a buyer’s monthly income is actually spent on their mortgage.
That’s where a more useful figure comes in: mortgage
payments as a percentage of take-home pay.
This measure shows how much of someone’s
salary is eaten up by mortgage payments each month.
And when you track that over time, things start to get interesting.
The Bigger
Picture: History Lessons in Housing
Back in the 1980s, after a recession,
house prices were low, and interest rates were volatile. Then came the
infamous 1988 housing boom, driven by
panic-buying ahead of tax relief cuts (MIRAS). Demand spiked, prices
soared, and both HPER and mortgage burdens shot up.
By the early 90s, it all crashed.
Interest rates peaked at 15%, the economy
tanked, and mortgage repayments became crushing. First-time buyers faced
record-high costs relative to income—and mass repossessions followed.
Fast forward to the early 2000s, and
another boom hit. House prices jumped by 10–18% per
year, but interest rates stayed fairly stable. Even so,
monthly mortgage costs rose as a share of income, peaking in 2007—right
before the 2008 financial crash.
Then came a curveball: interest
rates dropped sharply post-2009, making mortgages
cheaper—even as house prices crept back up. For nearly a decade, the HPER
kept climbing, but actual monthly mortgage costs as a percentage of
income fell.
In simple terms: houses looked more
expensive on paper, but they were often cheaper to own month-to-month.
The Covid
Boom—and What Came After
Covid changed everything again. As people
reconsidered where and how they wanted to live, demand spiked and house
prices surged in 2020 and 2021. Then came rising inflation, and with it,
rising interest rates.
By 2023, the
affordability metric peaked—but crucially, not to levels seen in previous
crises.
The worst point in 2023 saw first-time
buyers spending 27.6% of their
take-home pay on mortgage payments. That’s significant—but still better
than the 37.9% in 2007 or the eye-watering 47.8%
in 1989.
What’s Happening
Now in 2025?
Here’s the good news: things are
improving.
Although house prices remain high
(keeping the HPER elevated), mortgage payments as a share of
income are falling. Why? Two reasons:
- Interest rates have stabilised—and
are beginning to fall.
- Real wages (after inflation) are
growing.
This means monthly mortgage costs are
becoming more manageable again. In fact, the average
first-time buyer in Yorkshire and the Humber now spends just 25.6% of
their income on mortgage repayments—a big improvement
compared to past decades.
The Takeaway for
First-Time Buyers
So, is Huddersfield’s housing market
broken?
Not exactly. Yes, saving for a deposit is
still tough. And yes, house prices look intimidating when you compare
them to earnings. But if you’re judging affordability by how much you’ll
actually pay each month, there’s a brighter story emerging.
The key takeaway? Ignore
the scary headlines about house prices alone. Focus on how much of your
income your mortgage will actually take up.
That’s what lenders look at, and it’s what really defines affordability.
For first-time buyers—and their parents
trying to help—2025 could be a turning point. Mortgage pressures are
easing. Wages are improving. And if the current trends hold, this year
might just offer the best shot in years to get that long-awaited key in
hand.
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