£28,800 is now average income required here for 1st time buyer mortgage
1st time buyers need to earn 9% more than 3 years ago
The amount first-time buyers need to earn to get onto the first rung of the housing ladder in major town and cities has been revealed in new research.
An average first-time buyer – or couple buying – needs a household income of£54,400 to secure a mortgage on their first property, but the picture varies dramatically across the country, the figures from Zoopla show.
This is nearly double the average annual wage in Britain, suggesting that many simply have no choice but to club together with a partner, relative, or even friend to buy their first home.
The research also found that buying a first home is rapidly getting more expensive,as rising house prices increase deposits required to be put down and salaries needed for a mortgage.
The national average salary needed to get on the housing ladder rose 9 per cent to £54,400
Potential first-time buyers typically need to earn at least nine per cent more to secure their first property than they did just three years ago.
This comes to a household income of £54,400 to buy a first home, some £4,500 more than in 2016, with the average deposit required currently standing at £38,418.
However,there are some places where the income needed to buy has fallen since 2016 -and these include London, where lower prices combined with cheaper mortgage rates have made things slightly easier.
However,to capitalise on that first-time buyers in London would need to raise a hefty deposit of £119,000.
Aberdeen,Cambridge and Oxford have also got more affordable to buy a first home in terms of the salary needed
As with all things property related the picture varies dramatically depending on which part of the country you’re in.
The average income needed to buy a typical property ranges from £26,137 in Liverpool, to £84,000 in London – a spread of roughly £57,800.
Liverpool registered the highest house price growth of all of the areas analysed despite being the most affordable market for first-time buyers to enter.
In the Midlands, the level of income needed to buy is rising sharply, with the average salary needed in Nottingham now standing at £32,900, 18 per cent more than in 2016, and in Birmingham £35,200, 19 per cent more than 2016.
Leicester saw a massive 20 per cent increase in the level of income needed to buy a first home over the past three years, now standing at £38,000
To compile the list, the property website found the average loan-to-value and mortgage rate for first-time buyers in 20 towns and cities from banking trade body UK Finance to calculate annual mortgage repayments on a 30 year term.
It assumed that 30 per cent of net household income is spent on mortgage costs and the mortgage amount is capped at four times income, as is standard for most lenders.
It also assumed that buyers would put in a 15 percent deposit in regional cities and 25 per cent in London, Oxford and Cambridge.
The larger deposits for high value cities allow for the impact of lenders’ loan to income limits.
It isn’t all bad news for first-time buyers, particularly those in some southern hotspots where house prices are highest.
The average household income needed to purchase in the three most expensive cities,London, Oxford and Cambridge, has fallen by an average five per cent since 2016.
In London an average household income of £84,000 is needed, £3,250 less than the amount needed three years ago.
This follows years of weak growth and small price falls in the capital,where prices are just now beginning to stabilise.
Cambridge and Oxford require the highest incomes of anywhere outside of London, however,the income needed to purchase has also fallen in the university cities by five per cent and three per cent respectively.
Aberdeen registered a drop in the level of income required to buy of 12 per cent,the largest percentage decrease all the UK cities, as a result of sharp price decreases in the city since 2015.
The property market in the city, which is highly dependent on the oil industry, has been hit by declining oil and gas prices
Average deposit levels have also increased, and again the picture varies across the country.
The average first-time buyer deposit ranges from £119,000 in London to £18,449 in Liverpool.
Zoopla’s Richard Donnell said: ‘First-time buyers are an important group accounting for more than one in three sales.
‘Affordability remains attractive in many regional cities where house prices have not registered the gains seen in south eastern England.
‘We expect prices to continue to increase in cities where housing is in reach of those on average incomes.’
On a national level house price growth is slowing
The most recently available figures from the Office for National Statistics and HM Land Registry show that in April the average cost of a home stood at £229,000, which is £3,000 higher than at the same point a year ago.
Although house prices continue to grow, the rate at which they do is slowing on a national level.
The Office for National Statistics said: ‘Over the past three years, there has been a general slowdown in UK house price growth, driven mainly by a slowdown in the south and east of England.’
Regional property priceshifts, according to figures from HM Land Registry and the ONS
London’s property market continues to struggle, with prices down by 1.2 per cent year-on-year in April.
This does mark an improvement on March, however, when prices fell 2.5 per cent compared with March 2018.
Despite the recent slowdown, the average London house still costs £472,000. On a regional level this is seconded by the South East at £319,000, and the East of England at £289,000.
The North East continued to have the lowest average house price at £131,000, which means the average cost of a home in this region remains below 2007 levels.
The ONS report found that in the first-time buyer market, the average cost of a first home has risen by 0.7 per cent in the last month to £192,559
Article sourced from This is money website in an article by Will Kirkman on 27th June 2019 . Original full article can be viewed by clicking link below
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Mc Daid Mortgages do not accept responsibility for any advice provided or opinions expressed with this article. This is for information purposes only
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