COVID-19 causing some home sellers and buyers to reevaluate, but the majority remain undeterred

The latest research from lettings and sales agent Benham and Reeves has revealed that 83% of home buyers and sellers will not put a house purchase or sale on hold this year because of the current threat posed by the Coronavirus.

Just 9% of people stated that they were in the process of buying and selling but have now called it off and decided to wait, with just a further 9% of people originally planning to buy or sell this year but also now deciding to put it on hold.

Regionally, it’s those in Scotland that are the most defiant with 90% keeping calm and carrying on with their property transaction, while those in the North West were most conscious of the outbreak with just 77% stating it wouldn’t stop them transacting.

Perhaps surprisingly, those most at risk in the 65 and over category were the least deterred, with a huge 96% transacting on their property purchase or sale come hell or high water, while those aged 18-24 were the most conscious with 30% calling off a current sale or purchase and a further 27% deciding against it this year.

Despite the number of UK cases starting to climb, 69% of people also stated that even if COVID-19 became a more serious threat due to it starting to spread they still wouldn’t let it stop them buying or selling a house.

Looking back at historical outbreaks it would seem as though this defiant attitude is nothing new. During the flu pandemic between March 2009 and August 2010, UK house prices increased by 12.3%, 17.5% across the capital.

While the threat of the Ebola virus remained away from domestic shores, there was also no decline in UK house prices due to wider economic and investor related turmoil, with prices increasing 14.4% across the UK and 26.6% in London.

Director of Benham and Reeves, Marc von Grundherr, commented:

“We’ve just endured a very prolonged period of market uncertainty that caused many home buyers and sellers to adopt a ‘sit tight and see’ mentality. However, since the end of last year, they have returned in abundance and the market has well and truly sprung back to life.

It would seem that having sat on the sideline for such a long time, and while the threat of the Corona Virus remains at arm’s length for many, the mere suggestion that a global pandemic would now stop them from buying or selling is completely out of the question.

Growth during previous pandemics suggests that house prices will also remain unaffected and while we may see a stutter in foreign investment from areas to have been worst hit, domestically we will soldier on and won’t let it dent our aspirations of homeownership.”

Have you put a current or future house purchase or sale on hold because of the threat of the Coronavirus?
Answer
Percentage
Yes – I was buying or selling currently and have decided to wait
9
Yes – I was planning on buying or selling this year but have decided to wait
9
No
83

 

If Corona Virus were to become more serious in the UK, i.e start to spread, would this stop you from buying or selling a house?
Answer
Percentage
Yes
31
No
69

 

Have you put a current or future house purchase or sale on hold because of the threat of the Coronavirus?
Answer
East Anglia
East Midlands
London
North East
North West
Scotland
Yes – I was buying or selling currently and have decided to wait
7
9
13
10
10
5
Yes – I was planning on buying or selling this year but have decided to wait
8
4
8
6
13
5
No
85
87
79
84
77
90
Answer
South East
South West
Wales
West Midlands
Yorkshire and the Humber
Northern Ireland
Yes – I was buying or selling currently and have decided to wait
6
11
5
11
5
14
Yes – I was planning on buying or selling this year but have decided to wait
12
10
9
6
11
No
82
79
86
83
84
86

 

Have you put a current or future house purchase or sale on hold because of the threat of the Coronavirus?
Answer
18-24
25-34
35-44
45-54
55-64
65 and over
Yes – I was buying o…
30
27
12
3
3
1
Yes – I was planning…
27
13
10
7
8
3
No
43
60
78
90
89
96

 

Location
Flu pandemic
Ebola virus
AveHP – March 2009
AveHP – August 2010
Change / growth
AveHP – March 2014
AveHP January 2016
Change / growth
United Kingdom
£154,452
£173,417
12.3%
£179,537
£205,464
14.4%
England
£159,340
£180,807
13.5%
£190,037
£220,361
16.0%
Wales
£123,104
£132,453
7.6%
£130,464
£140,015
7.3%
Scotland
£125,727
£133,825
6.4%
£126,650
£136,790
8.0%
Northern Ireland
£140,190
£132,164
-5.7%
£103,570
£118,851
14.8%
North East
£117,079
£126,174
7.8%
£116,317
£121,096
4.1%
North West
£124,654
£135,743
8.9%
£130,061
£143,139
10.1%
Yorkshire and the Humber
£123,833
£136,896
10.5%
£131,800
£144,594
9.7%
East Midlands
£129,915
£144,010
10.8%
£146,448
£164,946
12.6%
West Midlands
£126,231
£137,155
8.7%
£137,210
£153,365
11.8%
East of England
£168,263
£194,104
15.4%
£208,325
£255,235
22.5%
London
£247,264
£290,646
17.5%
£361,400
£457,466
26.6%
South East
£191,156
£224,123
17.2%
£243,371
£293,678
20.7%
South West
£171,666
£196,163
14.3%
£200,618
£226,547
12.9%

Properganda PR

National and local media coverage for property businesses. Journo quotes delivered in minutes.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Breaking Property News 13/2/26

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   96% of proptechs fail to get to series A funding – here is why Thought Leadership by Andrew Stanton, CEO Proptech-PR The proptech sector has never been short of ideas. From AI-driven valuations and digital conveyancing to smart buildings and tokenised real estate, innovation in property…
Read More
Breaking News

Landlords unprepared for the Renters’ Rights Act

Three quarters have made no preparations for the end of Section 21, despite major reforms taking effect from May 2026 New research from Inventory Base has revealed widespread lack of preparedness among UK landlords ahead of the first phase of reforms under the Renters’ Rights Act (RRA), due to come into force on 1 May…
Read More
Breaking News

Why capital is staying in London despite a cooling housing market

By Joe Freedman, Head of Origination at ASK Partners London isn’t suffering from a lack of housing demand. It’s suffering from a failure to deliver. New data from Molior underlines the scale of that failure. Just 5,547 private homes broke ground across the capital last year, an 84% drop from a decade ago. Against an…
Read More
Breaking News

The hidden risk of overvaluing your home when moving in today’s market

With many homeowners turning ambitious conversations into tangible moving plans, the start of the year traditionally marks a surge in activity, particularly for families planning for the future. While the property market remains fundamentally healthy, experts at Beresfords say overvaluing property is one issue that continues to undermine the progress of those looking to sell.…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Rightmove launches next phase of AI-powered property search

Rightmove, the UK’s largest property platform, has launched a beta version of AI-powered conversational property search, as it continues to enhance its property search experience. In close collaboration with Google Cloud and built with Google’s Gemini models, conversational search is available via the property search bar on Rightmove’s website homepage. The latest move further expands…
Read More
Breaking News

Should you break things off with your mortgage lender this Valentine’s Day?

As Valentine’s Day approaches, the latest research from award-winning mortgage adviser, Alexander Hall, has revealed that more than half of homeowners approaching the end of a fixed-rate mortgage are currently undecided on their relationship with their lender, despite notable improvements across the mortgage market over the last 12 months. The consumer insight, commissioned by Alexander…
Read More