Yet never did. Here is why.
If
you have ever thought about selling your Huddersfield home, you will know how
tempting it can be to stretch the asking price. After all, it is your biggest tax-free
asset, and those extra few thousand pounds can feel like a sensible cushion.
Yet in the Huddersfield property market, ambition can sometimes cost more than
it earns.
Over the past five and a
half years, 7,811 Huddersfield homeowners have come away from the
market without selling. Many of them started with high hopes, only to find
their homes withdrawn months later, unsold and unloved by buyers who had moved
on to better-priced options.
The Data Behind the Frustration
To understand how this has
unfolded, let us look at what has actually happened across Huddersfield (HD1
through to HD8) since 2020.
Before I start, a property
sale is only legally binding when the home's exchange and completion is
finalised. Only then can the homeowner move. Therefore, I will only look at
that.
·
Of the 4,249 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2020, 63.1% exchanged and completed. The other 36.9%
of homeowners, a total of 1,569 homes, withdrew from the market
unsold.
·
Of the 4,179 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2021, 70.8% exchanged and completed. The other 24.5%
of homeowners, a total of 1,023 homes, withdrew from the market
unsold.
·
Of the 3,861 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2022, 70.8% exchanged and completed. The other 29.2%
of homeowners, a total of 1,126 homes, withdrew from the market
unsold.
·
Of the 3,806 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2023, 60.4% exchanged and completed. The other 39.6%
of homeowners, a total of 1,508 homes, withdrew from the market
unsold.
·
Of the 3,974 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2024, 61.1% exchanged and completed. The other 38.9%
of homeowners, a total of 1,546 homes, withdrew from the market
unsold.
·
Of the 2,799 Huddersfield properties that left estate
agents’ books in 2025 (so far), 62.9% exchanged and completed. The other
37.1% of homeowners, a total of 1,039 homes, withdrew from the
market unsold.
So, over the last five and
a half years, 7,811 Huddersfield homeowners, who had spent months and
months marketing their homes, only finished back where they started.
The main reason?
Overvaluing.
Why Overvaluing Happens
When an estate agent
visits your home, the valuation conversation can feel like a performance. You
might hear one agent suggest £235,000, another £250,000, and then someone
confidently says £285,000 without hesitation. It is flattering. It is exciting.
It is often a trap.
Some Huddersfield agents
know precisely what number will win the instruction. They do not need to sell
the home straight away; they only need to list it. In many cases, sellers are
tied into sole agency contracts lasting 20 to 26 weeks, during which the price
is quietly reduced until it reaches reality.
By that time, the most
motivated buyers have already dismissed it.
The Consequences of an Inflated Asking Price on Your Huddersfield Home
An overpriced property
sits on the market longer than it should. Buyers start to ask questions. Why
has it not sold? Is there something wrong with it? When a home lingers unsold,
it develops a stigma. Even after the price is reduced, newer listings look fresher
and attract more interest.
Independent data from
Denton House Research and TwentyEA clearly shows the impact.
41.8% of UK homes that do
go under offer (i.e., sale agreed/Sold STC) do so within 28 days, and 70.9% of
sales agreed, within 63 days.
And even if you do take
longer to sell, the chances of actually moving drop like a stone. You see, UK homes
that go under offer within 25 days of coming to the market
have a 94% chance of subsequently exchanging and completing (i.e.,
you moving). Homes that take over 100 days to find a buyer
subsequently see their success rate of getting to exchange and completion
(i.e., move) drop to just 56%.
So, not only does
overvaluing waste months, it also slashes the odds of your moving.
The Huddersfield Property Market Has Changed
During late 2020 and all
of 2021, the Huddersfield market was fuelled by record demand, cheap borrowing,
and pandemic relocation. Agents could list almost anything, and it would sell.
That period created unrealistic expectations that still linger today.
However, since the middle
of 2022, things have normalised. The average time on market has lengthened,
price reductions have risen sharply, and buyers have regained negotiation
power. The average property now sells for around 98.6% of its final
asking price, compared with nearly 102% during the boom. That shift may not
sound dramatic, but on a £500,000 home, it is almost £17,000 less in the
seller’s pocket.
Overvaluing only widens
that gap and reduces the chance your home will sell (and you move home).
Why Huddersfield Estate Agents Keep Doing It
If overvaluing hurts
homeowners and agents alike, why does it continue?
Pressure. Some larger
estate agency firms still judge performance by listings, not completions. Staff
bonuses are often linked to how many homes they put on the market, not how many
they sell. As a result, the motivation shifts from accuracy to acquisition.
Telling a Huddersfield seller
what they want to hear wins more listings than telling them the truth. It also
allows agents to appear “busy” in their marketing updates, even when most of
their listings remain unsold.
It is a volume game, and
the homeowner pays the price.
The Emotional Toll for Huddersfield Homeowners
For many, overvaluing does
more than delay a sale. It destroys plans. Huddersfield families who wanted to
upsize, Huddersfield retirees looking to downsize, and couples moving for work
have all been stuck in limbo. The months spent waiting, re-photographing,
reducing, and re-listing add emotional fatigue on top of financial frustration.
By the time an offer
finally appears (if ever it does), many homeowners are exhausted and willing to
accept less to move on. Ironically, that often means they sell for less than
they would have achieved if the home had been priced right from the beginning.
How to Avoid the Trap as a Huddersfield homeowner
- Seek multiple opinions.
Invite
at least two or three Huddersfield agents to value your home. If one figure
stands out as much higher, ask for evidence. Question: What percentage of their
listings actually reach completion? Be very careful about tying yourself to a
long sole agency agreement.
- Research sold data, not asking
prices.
Use
portals to check homes marked as "Sold Subject to Contract" or
"Sold". These reflect what buyers are really paying, not what sellers
hope for.
- Track the local ratio of listings
to sales.
If
more than 40% of homes on the portals are sold STC, it is a seller's market. If
that figure falls below 30%, buyers have the upper hand.
- Work with an agent who values
trust over flattery.
A
good agent focuses on the end goal: your exchange and completion, not just a
board outside your home. Avoid anyone asking for 20-to-26-week commitments.
Confidence should come from competence, not contracts.
The Truth About Overvaluing
Overvaluing feels harmless
at first. It sounds optimistic, even clever, bonus money in your back pocket. Yet
in practice, it costs homeowners time, money, momentum, and, actually, you
moving.
The data does not lie.
Since January 2020, 15,057 Huddersfield homeowners have sold and moved, yet 7,811
Huddersfield homeowners have withdrawn from the market without
selling, most due to unrealistic pricing. These are not failed homes. These are
frustrated people.
If you are planning to
sell, do not chase a fantasy number. Price your Huddersfield home where the
market is, not where you wish it were.
Remember, you only get one chance to
make a first impression when your home hits the market. A realistic price
attracts serious buyers quickly and gives you the best shot at moving
successfully.
If you are thinking about
selling and want an honest, evidence-based opinion on your Huddersfield
home's actual market value, with no fluff, no bull, no pressure, and no
nonsense, I would be delighted to help.
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