On a heat, spring morning in Canterbury, the cobbled streets are buzzing with exercise and the white Tudor homes gleam within the solar.
It’s a scene that appears far faraway from occasions within the Center East, however the battle is undermining enterprise and shopper confidence – rattling town’s housing market simply because the spring promoting season started.
Spooked by surging oil costs and inflation fears, lenders pulled tons of of mortgage merchandise inside 48 hours of the outbreak of warfare, changing them with costlier offers. Consumers and sellers, in flip, are having second ideas and a few are pulling out of offers altogether.
The temper is one among “worry and uncertainty”, says Andy Wicking, the director of the Charles Bainbridge property company. “It’s very nervous. There are many anxious folks.”
Within the first three months of this 12 months, simply 47% of house owners who requested Wicking to worth their property went on to checklist it – “fairly a major drop” on the 68% for a similar interval in 2025. In impact, homeowners are nonetheless asking for valuations however not appearing on them.
On the backside finish, first-time consumers, these with the smallest deposits and the least expertise of using out a turbulent market, are pulling out. “The chains falling down on the decrease finish, they’re the actually cautious ones,” Wicking says. “And funnily sufficient, they’re those that the market actually, actually wants.”
Wicking, who has spent 20 years promoting properties throughout Kent, insists that gross sales are nonetheless transferring and there are “all the time going to be deaths, debt and divorce, and those that must promote”. However he’s working to get offers throughout the road as quick as potential. “The longer a sequence goes on, the extra purchaser’s regret and worry units in,” he says. “It’s crucial to get the provide, get the deal achieved, get it throughout the road fast.”
For individuals who do make it to market, costs are slumping. “The competitors and the arrogance isn’t there now,” Wicking says. Sellers may anticipate bidding wars just a few months in the past however a home he values at £600,000 could now go on at £575,000 to get consumers by the door. Surveyors are more and more down-valuing properties too. It’s, Wicking says with an property agent’s cheerful confidence, a matter of “worth to entice”.
Canterbury’s historical cathedral and Roman partitions communicate to a deep historical past. Every home within the centre is exclusive, Wicking says, with Victorian terraces, Georgian townhouses and Tudor timber frames that lean out over the bunting-lined streets at unbelievable angles. “You purchase together with your coronary heart down right here,” he provides.
However that’s not the one attraction. A metropolis of fewer than 100,000 folks, Canterbury is a mixture of longstanding locals and London leavers who arrived after the pandemic in the hunt for extra space for his or her cash. On the larger finish, a London terrace price greater than £1m would possibly purchase one thing comparable right here for half that worth.
Martin Quick has been making an attempt to promote his dwelling for 3 years however viewings have “dropped by the ground since Iran”, he stated. The property was tough to worth – a transformed Georgian pub in Bekesbourne, a village simply exterior Canterbury. It has already fallen from an asking worth of £750,000 to £525,000, buffeted down repeatedly by excessive rates of interest after Liz Truss’s mini-budget and uncertainty earlier than Labour’s current budgets.
His brokers are pushing for one more discount however he’s refusing: “It’s not the worth of our property, it’s the dearth of individuals capable of proceed. The injury had already been achieved, after which we acquired this case. All people’s sitting on their palms.”
Two chains had already collapsed on him earlier than the Iran warfare began. Each consumers had properties of their very own they wanted to promote and each offers fell by. One of many consumers, a girl making an attempt to maneuver again to Kent from Bristol, continues to be in touch however she can’t promote her flat both. “We’re trapped,” Quick says.
He is aware of of at the very least 5 homes the place the worth has been lower. Within the close by medieval city of Sandwich, a house has simply come right down to the worth it fetched two years in the past. Quick says: “It’s not fairly unfavorable fairness however they’re not going to make any cash on it. Any worth that’s accrued on that property in two years has disappeared.”
Related tales are taking part in out throughout the nation. Property costs fell by 0.5% in March in contrast with a month earlier, in line with Halifax, pushing the common worth of a house again beneath the £300,000 mark to £299,677. Annual worth progress eased to 0.8%, down from 1.2% the earlier month.
Brian Swint, an impartial mortgage dealer, sits between the lenders repricing their merchandise and the consumers and sellers making an attempt to maintain up with charges. “We went from pricing in two or three rate of interest cuts this 12 months to 2 or three hikes,” he says. “That’s an enormous swing inside a month.”
The typical two-year fixed-rate mortgage stood at 5.90% on Wednesday, up from 4.83% at first of March and the best since July 2024, in line with the info supplier Moneyfacts.
Swint, who relies in Brighton, stated the anxiousness was in all probability misplaced. “It’s the worry,” he says. “Objectively, mortgage charges aren’t loopy excessive … however individuals are fearful.”
Nonetheless, practically one million householders are because of come off five-year mounted offers this 12 months, in line with the Monetary Conduct Authority. Those that have secured new offers are paying a median of £94 extra a month, in line with figures from the Connells Group property company.
All this has struck simply when homeowners would normally deliver their properties to market after hunkering down for the winter. “The timing couldn’t be worse for an enormous vitality shock – now could be when individuals are actually getting critical about transferring,” Swint says.
Support Greater and Subscribe to view content
This is premium stuff. Subscribe to read the entire article.












