Fall throughs costing UK property market £1bn a year

The total cost of fall throughs endured by the nation’s home sellers and buyers totalled just over £1.03bn throughout 2022 as a whole.

Related topics:  Property
Rozi Jones | Editor, Barcadia Media
11th April 2023
a house balanced on top of jenga blocks
"When viewing 2022 as a whole, the total cost to the industry has also continued to climb, breaching the £1bn threshold."

Despite a quarterly reduction in both the volume and cost of the average property fall through in Q4 2022, the total annual cost to UK homebuyers and sellers topped £1bn in 2022, a 6.3% increase on the previous year, according to research from House Buyer Bureau.

The figures for Q4 show that 75,809 homebuyers and sellers were subject to a property sale collapse, a 15.9% drop on the previous quarter as market activity started to slow.

The cost associated with a property fall through also fell marginally by 0.8% to an average of £3,311. As a result, the total cost of sales to have collapsed during the final quarter of last year totalled just shy of £251m, a substantial figure, but one that sat 16.6% below the previous quarter.

However, while there may have been a reduction in both volume and cost on a quarterly basis, the number of fall throughs seen in Q4 2022 were still 16.9% higher on an annual basis, with the average cost up 11.4%. The total quarterly cost was also up 30.2% versus Q4 2021.

The index shows that the total cost of fall throughs endured by the nation’s home sellers and buyers totalled just over £1.03bn throughout 2022 as a whole. This an increase of 6.3% on the previous year, but also the fifth year in a row that this figure has increased and marks a 75% increase versus 2018.

Managing director of House Buyer Bureau, Chris Hodgkinson, commented: “There’s no denying that the market has now started to cool and while this may bring its own concerns, a reduction in both sales volumes and house prices during the final stages of last year has, at least, seen a drop in the number of transactions that are collapsing on a quarterly basis, as well as a reduction in the cost incurred by buyers and sellers.

"There is, of course, a seasonal element at play here as well, with the final months of the year traditionally bringing a lull in market activity.

"However, this quarterly market gauge of instability not only remains higher when compared to the final quarter of 2021, but when viewing 2022 as a whole, the total cost to the industry has also continued to climb, breaching the £1bn threshold.

"It will be interesting to see where we sit during the first quarter of 2023. It’s predicted that the market will stand fairly firm which could well reverse the current downward trend in fall throughs as buyers and sellers return to the fold and market activity increases.

"When you also consider the additional volatility caused by the cost of living crisis and increasing cost of borrowing, we expect this will probably be the case.”

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