UK residential property transactions rose in November, with seasonally adjusted figures reaching their highest level since March, despite signs of slowing activity as the year end approached, figures from HMRC showed.
The provisional seasonally adjusted estimate for UK residential transactions in November 2025 was 100,350, up 8% from a year earlier and 1% higher than October. By contrast, the non-seasonally adjusted figure stood at 103,330, down 3% year on year and 12% lower than in October.
According to official data, the increase in seasonally adjusted activity reflected a rise from 99,060 transactions in October to 100,350 in November. This marked the strongest monthly level since March 2025. Non-seasonally adjusted residential transactions, however, fell sharply month on month as activity slowed ahead of the festive period.
Read more: UK mortgage rates unlikely to fall much further despite expected interest rate cuts
Non-residential transactions showed stronger momentum. The provisional seasonally adjusted estimate for November was 11,700, up 13% from October and 20% higher than a year earlier. The non-seasonally adjusted figure was 11,240, 12% higher than in November 2024 and marginally lower than in October.
Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla, said: “The number of housing transactions was 8% higher in November 2025 as sales agreed in spring and early summer finally completed before the year-end. 2025 was a year when the number of sales agreed continued to increase as more homes were listed for sale which bought more buyers into the market.
“The November budget delayed buying decisions in the final quarter of the year, but we expect a rebound in buyer demand in Q1 2026 and there are early signs already feeding through since Boxing Day, which means a strong start to the year ahead. This will be welcome news for buyers and sellers.”
Ryan McGrath, director of second charge mortgages at Pepper Money, said that December’s base rate cut to 3.75% had come too late to affect November completions but pointed to improving conditions ahead.
He added:“It signals a positive shift in momentum as we head into 2026. With inflation trending downwards and mortgage rates beginning to soften, the outlook for the year ahead is one of cautious optimism and returning stability.”
Read more: 10 first-time buyer homes to snap up now
Nathan Emerson, chief executive of Propertymark, said rising seasonally adjusted sales at the end of the year were an encouraging sign. “An increase in seasonally adjusted property sales towards the end of the year is an encouraging sign for the housing market and suggests that buyer confidence has begun to return,” he said.

