First-time buyer affordability best in 25 years
Potential first-time buyers on average earnings can now afford to buy a home in nearly four out of 10 regions of the UK, the Halifax has reported.
According to the lender’s research, 39% of the UK’s local authority districts are accessible to those wanting to buy their first property, compared to 6% when the housing market peaked in 2007.
Halifax housing economist, Martin Ellis, claims mortgage payments in relation to earnings are now significantly below the average during the past 25 years, as a result of lower interest rates and falling house prices.
However, he cautions that tight mortgage finance is still blocking the way for many potential first-time buyers.
The research also reveals that in 2009, the average price of a property bought by a first-time buyer stood at £133,794, or 10% less than in 2008, with the average first-time buyer deposit at £29,439.
In related news, the Bank of England has recently reported that mortgage lending improved in the three months to early December 2009, with the most significant rise in mortgage availability for borrowers needing loan-to-value ratios of above 75%.
In its latest Credit Conditions Survey the Bank also predicts “a further slight increase” in mortgage lending in the first quarter of 2010.
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