Over 1.2m homes sold across the UK

The latest analysis of Government transaction data by GetAgent.co.uk has revealed that, despite widespread perceptions that 2025 was a difficult year for the property market, more than 1.2m homes sold across the UK, marking a 9.3% increase on the previous year.

GetAgent analysed Government data on UK property transactions to estimate how many homes sold across the UK in 2025, as well as the level of market activity that could be seen over the coming 12 months.

The research shows that while 2025 has often been labelled a subdued year for the UK property market, not least due to higher interest rates and a prolonged period of market uncertainty that culminated with the Autumn Budget in November, an estimated 1,204,512 property sales completed last year.

Regionally, England saw the highest number of homes change hands, with 1,020,357 transactions completing in 2025, up 9.9% versus 2024. While Wales saw just 52,945 sales complete across the year, it recorded the strongest annual uplift in market activity, up 10.3% year on year.

In Scotland, transaction levels climbed to 104,231 in 2025, marking an annual increase of 3.8%, while Northern Ireland saw 26,979 transactions complete, up 5.9%.

GetAgent’s analysis also highlights how the market regained momentum following the initial rush of activity driven by buyers keen to complete ahead of 1st April when stamp duty thresholds reverted back to their original levels.

Q1 saw the highest number of UK transactions complete in 2025, totalling 339,600, as buyers pushed to get deals over the line ahead of the stamp duty deadline. While transaction levels dipped in Q2 to just 235,430 following this deadline-driven surge, the market regained momentum as the year progressed, with 309,440 transactions recorded in Q3 and an estimated 320,042 completing in Q4.

Based on historic market trends, GetAgent also forecasts that 2026 should bring another positive year for market momentum, with transaction levels expected to climb by a further 1.2% across the UK. While this uplift may appear muted in comparison to 2025’s annual growth, it would see total transaction levels rise to an estimated 1,219,000 in 2026, building on the strong foundations already laid last year.

 

Colby Short, CEO of GetAgent, commented:

“We’ve heard a lot of noise around 2025 market conditions and how it was a tough year for the UK property market. While that may be true to an extent when it comes to asking prices achieved, transaction estimates tell a very different story, one of underlying strength and momentum.

Of course, we did see a stamp duty fuelled surge in activity back in March which helped to boost transaction levels across the year as a whole, but the wider picture is one of stability and growth which puts the market in great stead for 2026.

From our own internal GetAgent data, we’re currently outpacing last year’s results. In the first full week of January, we delivered a record 11,311 valuation referrals, marking a 101% increase year on year and our strongest start to January to date.

It’s encouraging to see so many of our agent partners responding proactively and capitalising on this increased seller activity.”

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

Breaking News

Over 1.2m homes sold across the UK

The latest analysis of Government transaction data by GetAgent.co.uk has revealed that, despite widespread perceptions that 2025 was a difficult year for the property market, more than 1.2m homes sold across the UK, marking a 9.3% increase on the previous year. GetAgent analysed Government data on UK property transactions to estimate how many homes sold…
Read More
Breaking News

Planning reform alone will not fix the UK’s housing crisis

Propertymark has published a new position paper, Meeting UK house demand, moving beyond the planning system, warning that focusing solely on reforming the planning system will not deliver the number of homes the UK urgently needs. While planning reform is frequently cited as the primary solution to the housing shortage, Propertymark’s analysis shows that changes…
Read More
Breaking News

One in three mortgage hunting FTBs has at least 25% deposit

While higher loan-to-value (LTV) mortgages dominate first-time buyer demand a significant minority are seeking higher deposit deals, fresh data from Moneyfactscompare.co.uk can reveal. Of those looking for fixed term deals on moneyfactscompare.co.uk: Almost one in three (30%) first-time buyers are opting for 90% LTV mortgages, and a further 12% are looking at 95% LTV options. This…
Read More
how to present your property for sale
Breaking News

Nationwide House Price Index for January 2026 – Industry Reaction

Nationwide House Price Index for January 2026. The latest index shows that: House prices increased by 0.3% between December 2025 and January 2026. This reversed the -0.4% monthly decline seen between November and December of last year. Annual growth sat at 1% in January 2026, with this annual rate of growth increasing from 0.6% in…
Read More
Breaking News

House price growth edges higher in January

Slight rise in annual house price growth to 1.0% House prices were up 0.3% month on month Continued improvement in affordability helped drive first-time buyer activity in 2025 Headlines Jan-26 Dec-25 Monthly Index* 544.9 543.4 Monthly Change* 0.3% -0.4% Annual Change 1.0% 0.6% Average Price (not seasonally adjusted) £270,873 £271,068 * Seasonally adjusted figure (note…
Read More
Breaking News

Housebuilding sector shows early signs of recovery

The latest Barclays Business Prosperity Index report1 reveals that despite affordability pressures, regulatory challenges and financial caution, four in five businesses (83 per cent) operating in housebuilding and its supply chains remain confident about their outlook for the year ahead. Barclays’ anonymised client data from around 70,000 UK businesses, combined with research from 500 industry…
Read More