Cash buyers who needs them?

Cash buyers who needs them

If I had a fiver for every time, I had a buyer who said they were a cash buyer over the past 30-years, well I would have an awful of of extra cash myself.

The amount of times I have witnessed that triumphant smile when a prospective buyer looked me in the eye and said, ‘and I am a cash buyer’ prior to making their offer, is well into its thousands.

Did you know that in 2020, true cash buyers of property are likely to number over 380,000, that is a big slice of the typical 1.1M of properties that complete most pre-pandemic years, according to HMLR.

And just to balance that, as being an analyst I love figures, it is likely that over 280,000 first time buyers will be using a mortgage. Over 330,000 home movers will also be using a mortgage, with the BTL (Buy-to-Let) brigade forming a solid 60,000 of buyers utilising a mortgage to complete.

So, as a percentage cash buyer form 36% of the market, over one in three, a substantial component of the property marketplace. Using their cash for investment purchases, or even for the lucky ones as the payment for a first-time buyer home, or a cash from sale exit into that bungalow by the seaside, or jet setting apartment in Monaco.

What I would really like to explore, and feedback from anyone who has a view, is whether being a cash buyer in some ways makes ‘that buyer’ a God or Goddess capable of leveraging a better price when buying property.

Should vendors swoon, when told by their agent that they have a cash buyer? Are they more reliable, after all they may have a survey if sensible, but it will not be for mortgage purposes, so a few less hurdles if you are selling a gently rotting pile in the shires with lead flashings also missing from your roofline?

Or is it the case that cash buyers are – by their nature savvier, and more likely to cut up rough down the pre-exchange line. Feeling the wrench of lifting up the metaphorical floorboards to get their cash wealth out into the light of day, must in some way be traded off, are we back to power and influence where those with cash have the whip hand. Or feel they should have it.

My favourite memory around a cash buyer was in 1990, and a solicitor acting for buyer of a lovely terrace – for the princely sum of £32,000 in need of work. In days when solicitors took calls, I asked my local man had the buyer been in to pay his deposit.

Oh yes he came into reception with four Tesco bags, containing over £32,000 in used notes, we spent the day helping him count it before sending off to the bank, we even bought him a Marks & Sparks sandwich.’ Truly, even back then cash talks.

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Mortgage affordability on course for 2021 levels

Mortgage affordability could be on course to return to its most manageable level in almost five years, according to exclusive new analysis from INTEREST by Moneyfacts, as easing rates and rising incomes restore some breathing space for borrowers. The research shows that average mortgage payments, which peaked at close to half of gross monthly income…
Read More
Breaking News

City house prices soar

The latest research from Property DriveBuy reveals that house prices in UK cities are significantly outperforming both coastal and countryside locations, rising by an average of 3.4% over the past year, well ahead of the wider UK market which has seen growth of 2.5%. And while countryside homes have also seen a price increase, the…
Read More
Breaking News

Buyers return to housing market

2026 starts in line with 2024 with buyer demand 9% down on last year’s strong start Buyers are returning to the housing market at the start of 2026 as confidence improves and mortgage rates fall, but a growing number of homes for sale is giving buyers more choice and reshaping market conditions, according to Zoopla’s…
Read More
Breaking News

How will tenants be affected by the incoming Renters’ Rights Act?

On 28th October 2025, the Renters’ Rights Bill was passed into law, and it is now the Renters’ Rights Act. Changes to legislation resulting from this new Act will take effect from May 2026. This will affect landlords and how they let out their property, and it is worthwhile being aware of how it affects…
Read More
Seaside Properties UK
Overseas Property

Gibraltar property values rise faster than UK

Gibraltar house prices rise faster than UK and London, despite market activity dropping 46% The latest market analysis by Enness Global has revealed that Gibraltar’s property market has seen stronger annual house price growth than both the UK and London, even as the number of transactions completing across the market has fallen sharply, creating a…
Read More
Breaking News

Homes with fewer photos priced £80,000 lower

The latest research by London lettings and estate agent, Benham and Reeves, has revealed a stark disparity in asking prices depending on how extensively a property is marketed, with homes listed using four photos or fewer priced almost £80,000 lower on average than those benefiting from five or more images. Benham and Reeves analysed current…
Read More