There are no properties currently for sale in London for £100,000 or less and only four properties at £125,000 or under which would be exempt from stamp duty, according to new research.
Excluding shared ownership and auction properties, houseboats and retirement homes, the cheapest property on the market today in London is a studio flat in Havering which is asking for offers over £100,000, the study from online estate agents Housesimple shows.
With stamp duty rates kicking in on properties with a purchase price above £125,000, there are currently just four properties in London that are stamp duty exempt. The standard 0% stamp duty band covers properties with a purchase price of £0 up to £125,000. However, first time buyers are exempt from paying any stamp duty on properties up to £300,000.
Over the past few months, London property prices have noticeably cooled, and many sellers are dropping their prices to attract buyers. But there is still an affordability issue in London, particularly for people on average UK wages.
For example, someone earning the average UK salary of £27,271, according to the Office for National Statistics, who has secured a mortgage of three times their salary, would still need a deposit of close to £20,000 to even be able to afford the property in Hornchurch, and that’s assuming the seller would accept an offer of £100,000.
After Hornchurch, the next cheapest property is a study flat in Bexley for £105,000, followed by a studio flat in Croydon for £120,000, then a one bed flat in Walthamstow of £125,000, but the last two are looking for cash buyers only.
‘The death of the £100,000 property in London was inevitable, but with just four properties on the market at under £125,000, this will very soon be the new price floor for the capital’s property market,’ said Sam Mitchell, Housesimple chief executive officer.
‘This research highlights the need for properties at the lower end of the market. Shared Ownership and Help to Buy have helped people on average incomes get a foot on the ladder, but both schemes have their critics,’ he pointed out.
‘It can be complicated to sell a property if you only have a small stake in it, and expensive to increase your stake, as there are additional costs to consider. While Help to Buy has been criticised for actually pushing up house prices and providing a vehicle for developers to inflate new build values,’ he explained.
‘London prices cooling will help buyers, but we should be careful wishing for a Brexit slump, because even a 10 to 20% drop in prices could push thousands of people into negative equity and unable to move. That wouldn’t be a good outcome for anyone,’ he added.