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Home»UK Property»What will 2024 general election mean for UK house prices?
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What will 2024 general election mean for UK house prices?

May 31, 20249 Mins Read


The UK general election campaign is hotting up as the major parties jostle for voters. But one area that we haven’t heard much about yet is the housing market.

Existing homeowners and prospective buyers could face higher mortgage rates for longer as the election may delay interest rate cuts. The next government also faces a housing supply crisis – an issue banks say needs to be prioritised when Parliament returns in mid-July.

So, what could the campaign period and the election itself mean for the housing market?

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Has the general election affected UK house prices?

Given not much time has passed since Rishi Sunak called the general election on 22 May, it’s too soon to say with any certainty what the impact on house prices has been. It’s unlikely we will be able to get an impression of how the market has reacted until late-June.

When the PM went to the polls, the country was seeing a growing north-south divide in house price inflation, alongside a muted spring bounce. There were also hopes that prices would grow more than expected over 2024 as a whole, despite 16-year high interest rates posing mortgage affordability challenges. This optimism may be partly down to greater pragmatism from buyers when it comes to the type and size of property they go for.

According to research by non-partisan think tank the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS), the proportion of home ownership among 25 to 34-year-olds has also only recently recovered to 2010 levels. As of the end of the 2022/23 financial year, the percentage of younger adults who owned their own home stood at 39%. This figure is 20-percentage points lower than what it was in the year 2000. The IFS also pointed out that the home ownership challenge was moving into higher age brackets, with the number of homeowners aged 45 to 59 down seven percentage points compared to 2010.

How have UK house prices reacted to previous elections?

To help us understand what could happen to the housing market, both in the run up to the election and in the period afterwards, several property market analysts have looked at how it reacted around previous national polls.