This article was featured in the BBC:
The number of property sales in
the UK remains low this year owing to the halt put on the housing market at the
heart of the coronavirus outbreak. However, there has been a mini-boom since
the market reopened in different parts of the UK. Sales agreed on the portal
were 76% higher than the five-year average, Zoopla said.
"Buyer appetite has been
widely attributed to pent-up demand resulting from lockdown, but it also
reflects the impact on the nation as it collectively reassesses what it wants
and needs from a home," its report said. Quarantine has galvanised many
homeowners and renters into reconsidering their housing requirements, resulting
in demand for more space and changing work and commuting patterns."
That has led to greater demand
for larger homes when buyers - often those without the need for a mortgage -
can afford it.
Demand had also been given
"extra impetus" in London and the south-east England as a result of
the temporary stamp duty holiday, according to Richard Donnell, research and
insight director at Zoopla.
Rival property portal Rightmove
recently said that landlords and owners should show off gardens in marketing
photos as house-hunters who have been forced to spend so much more time at home
this year increasingly put a value on space. Pictures of the kitchen had
previously been considered key to attracting the attention of browsers. (BBC)
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