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Houses in a street I've been looking at have jumped 5-10% in around 6 months.
Transactions at a massive high.
The suspension of Stamp Duty must be temporarily boosting sales but it ending in March of next year and the fact that unemployment is rising to Covid-19 and, with it, the subsequent dip in economic activity all points in one direction.
A substantial chunck of our economy depends on the buying and selling of houses
Its not good
Leaving the well being of the country to the ups and downs of the market place is very dodgy
Is it that house sales that would normally have taken place earlier in the year are now being squeezed into a shorter timeframe, thus giving the impression of a buoyant market.
You can get a pretty good picture of what is going on in the housing market here:
https://landregistry.data.gov.uk/app/ukhpi
It is reporting up to August '20 at the moment.
Generally the market is up across GB since the beginning of the year but the strength of the price growth is mixed. For instance, detached properties in Ceredigion were up around 10% in August (yoy) and terraced properties in RCT were up by 2.6% (yoy).
There is a feeding frenzy around rural properties in Wales at the moment with the majority of buyers currently from England. LTT in Wales has definitely not put off English buyers despite the disparity between the former and the English equivalent. Drakeford may have played a blinder because a great deal of LTT take is coming from English buyers.
Wales
The portion up to and including £250,000 0%
The portion over £250,000 up to and including £400,000 5%
The portion over £400,000 up to and including £750,000 7.5%
The portion over £750,000 up to and including £1,500,000 10%
The portion over £1,500,000 12%
England
Up to £500,000 Zero
The next £425,000 (the portion from £500,001 to £925,000) 5%
The next £575,000 (the portion from £925,001 to £1.5 million) 10%
The remaining amount (the portion above £1.5 million) 12%
there you go
My figures are the same as you've just posted for a £260k house, you might want to check your calculations.
I never said the LTT wasn't more, what I was disagreeing with you was that you'd said that it would be "considerably more expensive".
To me an increase of £500 on a £260k house is not that considerable.
Presumably the English cut the taxes to encourage house moves as they thought they'd fall away during the virus.
Wales didn't and the market has remained strong.
Have never understood the obsession with house prices. Unless you have a second property that you need to sell at a specific time, then property prices are largely irrelevant.
If you only own one house and are not looking to move, then it's value is irrelevant.
You own a house but want to move upwards, if prices are rising, then you get more for the property you are selling, but pay somewhat more for the one you are buying. Vice verca if you are trading down.
For most people, a house is where they live, not an investment. It really doesn't matter for them whether prices are rising or falling.