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December 22, 2024
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First-time buyers are paying £400 more a month to get on property ladder since last election


Typical first-time buyers face paying £227,757 to get their first step on the property ladder, a jump of nearly a fifth since the Conservatives were elected in 2019, according to property website Rightmove.

It has only become more difficult for people to get their first foot on the property ladder since the last general election(No credit)

Someone newly getting onto the property ladder can expect to pay around £400 more per month for their mortgage than five years ago. Calculations by property website Rightmove suggest the average first-time buyer mortgage payment has risen by 61 per cent since the last General Election in 2019, from £667 to £1,075 per month.

The calculations made various assumptions, including that first-time buyers would have a 20 per cent deposit to put down, that their mortgage term would last 25 years and that they were taking out a five-year fixed-rate mortgage on an average rate.




Rightmove also used average asking prices of a typical first-time buyer homes, with two bedrooms or fewer, for the research. Across Britain, first-time buyers now face paying £227,757 for a home, an amount which has jumped by nearly a fifth (19%) since 2019.

READ MORE: Thousands of households to get £200 cost of living payment by end of July

In the north-west of England, asking prices for first-time buyer homes have jumped by a third (33%) since 2019, while London has seen the smallest percentage rise of just 6 per cent over the past five years, according to the website. London house prices are typically higher than elsewhere in Britain – and the average price tag on a first-time buyer property there according to Rightmove’s data is over half a million pounds.

Affordable housing is a top priority for many voters, according to an IPSO poll(PA Wire/PA Images)

Rises in mortgage rates as well as house prices have also had an impact on monthly mortgage costs. The Bank of England base rate remained on hold last week, but with Consumer Prices Index (CPI) inflation having slowed to its 2 per cent target, a base rate cut is still expected on the horizon.

Tim Bannister, Rightmove’s property expert, said: “As rates have increased over the last five years, the amount that a typical first-time buyer is paying each month on a mortgage has outstripped the pace of earning growth. Some first-time buyers are looking at extending their mortgage terms to 30 or 35 years to lower monthly payments, or looking at cheaper homes for sale so that they need to borrow less.

“If mortgage rates reduce, this will help first-time buyers in the short-term more so than election housing promises. We hope that the next government can support first-time buyers with well thought out policies, which address the difficulties of saving up a large enough deposit and being able to borrow enough from a lender.”



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