The average time it takes to sell a house in Great Britain has shifted dramatically. In just two months it has moved from a record high to a 13 year low.
On the 23 March the UK went into lockdown, and the housing market paused. The government advised against all non-essential house moves and as a result, the market froze.
By June – a month into the market re-opening - the time between an agent receiving an instruction to sell a house and an offer being accepted, reached an all-time high of 117 days. This was indicative of properties which had originally come to the market pre-lockdown and which, post-lockdown were being bought by buyers on the hunt for space.
Fast-forward two months, and the August time to sell figure fell to just 28 days - the fastest month in which to sell a home since March 2007. Some 69% of the homes sold in August were ones that had been listed for sale since the housing market re-opened for business in May.
The market is moving fast. Nationally one in five homes in August sold within a week of coming onto the market, 45% in the North East and 27% in the North West. And while homes marketed for less than £250k sold quickest – an ongoing trend – the time it took to sell a home costing between £250 - £750k, more than halved since the same period a year ago.