Kirstie Allsopp was right. Wasn’t she?

I thought I would wait a good few days for the storm to calm down before I wrote about, and commented on, the recent comments by TV presenter Kirstie Allsopp towards young people and affording first homes.

Now, if you are believing everything you read and watch via the gutter MSN then my style of writing is not likely to appeal to you as I have zero regard for all the main stream news outlets who report nothing more than paid for agenda news and love getting their horns stuck in to damning people. It is long since I paid for a BBC TV licence and today I gain most of my news purely from user generated media outlets across social media, this way I get a fairer picture of what is happening – ‘Here is the news and you decide how you wish to digest it’ format suits me fine. Since her comments it has been a frenzy of fake press hysteria.

 

Now Kirstie Allsopp, a celebrity face from television thanks to the popular TV show that she hosts alongside Phil Spencer that is Location, Location, Location caused a stir in the social media world with her recent comments towards young people and the affordability of property. Since then the typical trolls have been out, to include Piers Morgan, and countless other haters throwing abuse at Kirstie. Some have been waiting for such an excuse as many disagree with her political views and those on the covid19 agenda.

There have been great sensible debates and comments to0 from those agreeing and disagreeing on her points which have expanded the conversation outwards with people looking at facts and figures to delve in to affordability and the problem faced by first time buyers. There has also been some funny satire:

 

So, Kirstie says to The Sunday Times that to afford your first home youngsters should consider getting rid of some additional costs such as Netflix and the gym and also should consider moving to another location in order to find cheaper property. My first comment would be, sound advice? I remember saving for our first property and we had to move location from wanting Northeast London to accepting a northern Essex town and having to travel extra miles in to London instead. I also remember ditching one of our cars and also being more careful with spending money.

I will agree that today youngsters have far more things available to them than we had a generation back. Part of daily life today for some will be that £5 coffee each morning in Costa, catching up on movies via Amazon, mobile phone contracts with the latest iPhone and more. If I were young once again and thinking about purchasing my first property, assuming at that moment I would not have enough income / deposit, then I’d want to ditch some of my monthly non essential costs.

Generalising is what Kirstie was meaning as far as I am concerned, there is no point in moaning that you can not afford an average priced local property when they are cheaper options open to you. Many of us want better than what we have, but we usually have to accept what we can afford – The route out of this for most is hard work, saving, a bit of luck, family support which sees us landing more money which in turn gets us up the property ladder and gives us added spending money.

Yes property prices have gone up, cost of living as gone up especially in the last 3 years, interest rates up and business has been effected for many following government lock downs across the country – It is tough times at present and affordability is a real issue for many wanting a nice home locally especially with continued rocketing house prices. It would be good to see a heated debate with the government instead to get an idea of what they are doing about it!

Christopher Walkey

Founder of Estate Agent Networking. Internationally invited speaker on how to build online target audiences using Social Media. Writes about UK property prices, housing, politics and affordable homes.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Volume doubles as property market sees strong return of new applicants

Foxtons Lettings Market Index – January 2026 Demand rebounded sharply from December, with registrations up 93% month on month and new renters per instruction up 11% compared to December, reflecting a seasonal uplift in activity at the start of the year. New renters per new instruction fell 12% year on year, indicating that competitive pressure…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Property valuation leads to agents up 50% on last year

The launch of a new valuation product and AI optimisations to the existing product suite led to a significant uplift in valuation leads for agents from Rightmove in January. Valuation leads grew by 50% in January 2026 compared to the same period last year. The launch of Online Agent Valuation towards the end of 2025 helps connect…
Read More
Breaking News

Worst areas for landlord eviction waiting times

The latest research industry insight from LegalforLandlords has highlighted where the longest and shortest wait times are when it comes to court hearing dates for landlords who are trying to repossess their properties, with the most overstretched courts found in the likes of Birmingham, Croydon, and Slough. Having analysed internal data on wait times for…
Read More
Breaking News

726,000 rented homes could remain non-decent by 2035

And that’s without holding them to the updated standard outlined in the recent DHS consultation A new consultation on the Decent Homes Standard (DHS) has suggested that all rented homes, private and social, must meet an updated, more stringent standard by 2035. However, new research from Inventory Base reveals that if the current rate of…
Read More
Breaking News

UK House Price Index for December 2025

The latest UK House Price Index shows that: The average monthly rate of house price growth in December was -0.7%. Average UK house price annual inflation was 2.4% in the 12 months to December 2025. As a result, the average UK house price currently sits at £270,000.   Here are some thoughts from the Industry.…
Read More
Cozy Pet Cat Tree Grey
Breaking News

10 things all tenants need to know when renting now

The Renters’ Rights Act 2025 received Royal Assent on 27th October 2025 and will introduce major reforms to private renting in England. The first raft of measures affecting tenants will come into force on 1st May this year. So, whether you currently have a tenancy agreement or are planning to rent this year, here are…
Read More