Property wealth increases for retired homeowners

Retired homeowners saw their property wealth increase by more than £3,150 in the past year, analysis from UK’s leading independent equity release adviser Key shows.

Total property wealth owned by over-65s who have paid off mortgages is valued at £1.133tn and has increased by £14.78bn in the past year, Key’s Pensioner Property Equity Index reveals.

Key’s data shows the total value of pensioner property fell to £1.096tn in the early part of last year before recovering in the autumn to £1.132tn.

Gains since the autumn have been modest but retired homeowners have still seen strong year-on-year increases.

Since Key started analysing the mortgage-free property wealth of the over-65s in 2010, retired homeowners have benefited from growth of 45% to a total of nearly £354bn. This earns them gains of £75,000 in the past 10 years.

In the past year over-65s in Wales have seen the highest gains of £11,700 whilst retired homeowners in the West Midlands (£8,165), East Midlands (£5,799) and the North West (£4,355) have also done better than average.

The only region to suffer substantial falls was East Anglia where retired homeowners are £3,267 worse off over the year.

Homeowners in the South East saw marginal price falls of £149 over the year.

The South East still accounts for nearly a fifth (18.9%) of all property wealth held by retired homeowners, whilst East Anglia is the fourth wealthiest region in terms of mortgage-free property held by over-65s.

Will Hale, chief executive at Key, said: “Political and economic uncertainty hit the housing market last year but there were genuine signs of recovery towards the end of last year and retired homeowners who no longer have mortgages were big beneficiaries.

“Interestingly it was the over-65s in Wales who made the biggest gains – seeing the value of their property increase by nearly £1,000 a month – while those in East Anglia and the South East saw modest falls.

“While it is useful to be aware of market fluctuations what happens on a monthly basis is unlikely to alter the simple fact that millions of over-65s retain considerable property wealth which can transform their standard of living in retirement and enable them to address a wide range of financial issues.

“Increasingly, we are seeing people choosing to access property wealth in retirement and using modern lending features to suit their individual circumstances.

“Choosing to use drawdown rather than lump sum and to repay the interest rather than letting it roll up make these products even more flexible and attractive than before.”