What the 2025 Party Conferences Told Us About Property

Inventory Base, the UK’s leading platform for property reporting and compliance, has today released its analysis of key housing and property policy developments from all four major UK political party conferences, revealing a clear divide between those prioritising hard targets and those favouring deregulation. With housing a central issue on the national agenda ahead of the next general election, the party gatherings provided critical insight into each party’s stance on the future of the property market.

The review focuses on four core themes:

Housing supply
Planning reform
The homebuying process
Renters and leaseholders

 

Housing Supply

During their conference in Liverpool, Labour reaffirmed its leading election pledge to deliver 1.5 million new homes in England by 2029, unveiling plans to launch 12 new towns, with Tempsford, Leeds South Bank, and Crews Hill in North London named as initial development zones. The party signalled a determination to “do whatever it takes” to get Britain building, including tackling the housing skills shortage.

The Conservatives did not introduce new national housebuilding targets, instead maintaining a focus on demand-side support. While no additional supply targets were announced, fiscal incentives aimed at first-time buyers dominated the conversation.

The Liberal Democrats reiterated their long-standing target of building 380,000 homes per year, with a particular focus on delivering 150,000 social homes annually. Reform UK didn’t focus much on property during their own conference, and when doing so they took a less data-driven approach, offering rhetoric on fast-tracking brownfield development and loosening affordable housing requirements, although detailed policy commitments were limited.

 

Planning

Planning policy drew clear dividing lines between the parties. Labour committed to mandatory housing targets and a “brownfield-first” approach, supplemented by the strategic release of certain grey-belt sites under defined conditions. Ministers also hinted at a series of technical reforms aimed at reducing build-out times and adjusting planning thresholds.

In contrast, the Conservative Party gave little attention to planning, aside from broad references to green belt protections. Discussions around planning reform were notably absent from the main stage, with greater emphasis placed on tax and energy policy.

The Liberal Democrats expressed support for prioritising brownfield development, in keeping with their broader environmental agenda. Reform UK advocated for streamlining planning processes and infrastructure funding, again placing brownfield development at the forefront, alongside a broader narrative of reducing net migration as a means to ease housing pressure.

 

Homebuying Process

Labour placed significant emphasis on reforming the homebuying process, proposing a blueprint to reduce transaction timelines by up to a month. Measures include increasing the provision of up-front information, piloting binding offers, and improving industry standards for estate agents. Labour claims these reforms could save first-time buyers an average of £710 and speed up completions significantly.

The Conservative Party announced a £5,000 “First Job Bonus” in the form of a National Insurance rebate for first-time buyers, with couples eligible for up to £10,000. They also pledged to abolish stamp duty on the purchase of main homes under a future Conservative government.

The Liberal Democrats reiterated their commitment to regulating estate and letting agents, though broader plans for homebuying reform were less detailed. Reform UK made limited mention of the issue during their conference.

 

Renters and Leaseholders

Labour confirmed that its Renters’ Rights Bill is nearing Royal Assent, alongside a broader focus on improving the safety and condition of social housing. The party is also working on a wider leasehold reform agenda, with further details expected in due course.

The Conservatives offered little in terms of policy updates for renters or leaseholders during their conference, as housing played a secondary role to fiscal and welfare matters.

The Liberal Democrats took a more assertive stance, vowing to abolish leasehold arrangements entirely, cap ground rents, and remove dangerous cladding at no cost to leaseholders. Reform UK made limited contributions in this area, choosing instead to focus on broader housing supply narratives.

 

Key takeaways

This year’s party conference season exposed an increasingly divergent approach to housing policy. While Labour and the Liberal Democrats came armed with detailed reform agendas and firm targets, the Conservatives and Reform UK leaned more on fiscal tools and deregulation.

For the property sector, that splits matters dramatically. Whoever leads the next government will undoubtedly inherit a housing industry that is strained by demand, tighter regulations and a delivery policy that is fractured and unclear. Clarity, consistency and credible implementation will be the true test of every promise made this autumn.

 

Sián Hemming-Metcalfe, Operations Director at Inventory Base, commented:

“While some parties are willing to set hard targets and tackle systemic issues head-on, others are leaning on deregulation and fiscal levers to let the market decide.

Either way, this is a defining moment for housing policy.

The industry is ready to deliver – it’s strong policy that needs to catch up. What happens next, including the impact of the Budget next month and consultations on the homebuying & selling process, will determine whether ambition or autonomy wins out.”

EAN Breaking News

Breaking News from the team at Estate Agent Networking. Have a new story to share with us? Then please get in contact today! When and where we can we will refer to third party websites with a 'live link back' where news was released first.

You May Also Enjoy

Home and Living

Signs of Outdated Wiring in Older Tulsa-Area Homes

Tulsa has a lot of beautiful older homes. Brookside bungalows, Maple Ridge tudors, the postwar neighborhoods that fill out Midtown and East Tulsa. They were built well, but most were built before central air, before microwaves, before two-car households with two laptops and a dozen phone chargers. The electrical systems inside them were designed for…
Read More
LIVING BY THE SEASIDE 2022
Breaking News

Britain’s seaside price hotspots revealed

New analysis from the UK’s largest property platform Rightmove reveals Britain’s seaside hotspots where prices are rising the fastest Bootle in Merseyside leads the way, with average asking prices up 11% year-on-year, followed by Crosby in Liverpool (+9%) and Penarth in South Glamorgan (+9%) Other coastal locations including Llantwit Major in South Glamorgan (+8%) and Llanelli, in Carmarthenshire (+7%) are also seeing strong price growth Average asking prices are currently 0.3% lower in Great Britain compared to last year, with some seaside hotspots outpacing the…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Hertfordshire emerges as strongest performing London commuter county

New research from UK Property Development reveals that while London property prices fell by more than -3% in the past year, prices in some of the capital’s surrounding counties have enjoyed positive growth, none more so than the premium commuter county of Hertfordshire.   In the past year, London’s average house price has fallen by…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Second homes losing appeal among the rich

New Survey Reveals Ongoing Maintenance Is the Biggest Barrier to Second Home Ownership   62% say upkeep and hassle would stop them from buying a second home, even if money were no object   A new survey conducted by luxury co-ownership platform Equity Residences has revealed that the practical realities of owning a second home…
Read More
Letting Agent Talk

How to build a property portfolio with buy-to-let mortgages

One of the reasons property is such a popular asset choice for investors is that you don’t need to invest all the money yourself; you can leverage funds from the bank. Here’s a very simplistic example of how borrowing via a buy-to-let (BTL) mortgage allows you to multiply your returns versus owning a property all-cash:…
Read More
Home and Living

2026’s Fastest-Growing Bathroom Trend Is the Wet Room

“Wet rooms have become one of the standout bathroom upgrades of 2026, moving from luxury extra to everyday renovation choice as more homeowners prioritise space, style and easy cleaning. The momentum is only building as spa‑style bathrooms stay in demand.” “Wet rooms used to be a niche request,” says Ant Langston, Marketing Manager at Heat…
Read More