๐ ๐ข๐ง ๐ ๐๐ซ๐๐ง๐ญ๐ก๐๐ฆ ๐๐จ๐ฆ๐๐จ๐ฐ๐ง๐๐ซ๐ฌ ๐ฎ๐ง๐๐๐ฅ๐ ๐ญ๐จ ๐ฌ๐๐ฅ๐ฅ
May 2nd, 2022
- The average time to find a buyer for a Grantham property reduced from 75 days in 2020 to 45 days in 2021
- Yet still, just over 1 in 4 Grantham homeowners are on the market after 12 weeks
- Why are so many Grantham homes still on the market after all that time, and what does it mean for the Grantham property market?
You would have needed to have been living in a cave since the end of Lockdown No.1, not to realise the property market has been on fire in Grantham (and the UK as a whole) for the last 18/20 months.
It has been very much a sellerโs market, especially in 2021. Yet as we enter the second quarter of 2022, I have noticed a slight rebalancing of the Grantham property market, more towards buyers, something that is good news for everyone (sellers and buyers) locally.
In 2020, it took on average 75 days from the average Grantham property appearing on the property portals (ie Rightmove, Zoopla etc) to the property going sold (STC)
Interesting when compared to the national average of 72 days in 2020. Yet, last year, this was reduced to 45 days in Grantham (51 days nationally).
So, whatโs the issue with the Grantham property market on fire?
Well, that was last year, and things have changed slightly since.
Of the properties for sale in Grantham and the 5 miles around it, 25.3% of houses have been on the market for more than 12 weeks.
That doesnโt sound a lot, yet that is an eternity in this market!
So, why are there so many properties on the market in Grantham still for sale after all this time โฆ it usually comes down to one thing โฆ the practice of โovervaluingโ.
So before I explain what overvaluing is, let me give you some background.
Many agents (not just ourselves), in 2021, were achieving top prices for Grantham property with multiple offers becoming the standard. The property they were selling was only available to buy for days before the owner obtained multiple offers that were not only at a satisfactory level, yet more than they dreamed ever likely.
Although this was great news for Grantham homeowners, this caused fewer homes to come onto to market in the last six months in Grantham, as people were afraid to put their homes on the market without having a property to buy.
With fewer properties coming onto the market, some Estate Agents have become more and more desperate to get a larger slice of this smaller property market. It has seen an unwelcome side of the estate agency profession, the estate agency practice of โovervaluingโ.
While โovervaluingโ is nothing new, the custom has been generally limited to a small number of estate agents. Yet now, itโs become more prevalent and creates uncountable distress and pressure for some Grantham homeowners.
Many Grantham homeowners want to sell quickly to get the property of their dreams. Yet, in many cases, when they do put their property on to the market, they donโt sell quickly enough because of this โovervaluingโ (even with the fantastic current property market conditions).
To give you an idea of the issue, 69% of Grantham homes put on the market in the last 30 days have not sold.
There are hundreds of Grantham families having their dreams dashed by โovervaluing.โ
Therefore, let me look at exactly what overvaluing is, why itโs on the rise and most importantly, the harm overvaluing causes to homeowners like yourself.
You would think the most important thing in estate agency to estate agents is all about finding the best buyer for your home, at the best price, who can make the move with the least amount of hassle.
To us it is, and to many other Grantham estate agents, it is as well. Yet, to some agents, sales arenโt the essential objective. Instead, it is having a vigorous catalogue of properties to sell to generate more future leads.
Deprived of an endless number of new properties for sale, the enquiries estate agents receive will significantly drop, leaving them high and dry without any buyer (or seller leads), the lifeblood of estate agents.
Therefore, some (not all), but some Estate Agents will feed on a homeownerโs appetite to get the highest possible price for their Grantham home by giving them an over-inflated suggested asking price to market their property at (i.e. โovervaluingโ).
If one Estate Agent can get you an extra ยฃ30,000 for your Grantham home, you will take it, arenโt you?
The suggestion of pushing the asking price of your Grantham home to 10%, 15% even 20% could be seen by many as a temptation too good to miss. Yet once you are on the market, the agent is trained to slowly get you to reduce your asking price over a lengthy sole agency agreement.
The problem is that the home of your dreams might have sold by the time you reduced your price in 3 months. Also, two Which! (the consumer people) reports in 2017 and 2019 proved you ended up getting less for your home when it did eventually sell (which means you lose money) and finally, the agents know homeowners perceive its hassle to swap agents (which it isnโt).
But Estate Agents only get paid when they sell the house; why do they overvalue?
Would it surprise you that some Estate Agency chains pay their staff a commission when they put the property on to the market, not when it sells? So, their team overinflate their suggested asking prices to get that commission?
Over the last 18 months, with the rising property market, there has undoubtedly been a valid reason for pushing the envelope on the asking price. Yet, yet if every house like yours is on the market or sold subject to contract at ยฃ300,000 to ยฃ320,000, yours isnโt going to be ยฃ355,000, let alone ยฃ375,000 โ even in this market.
With 69% of Grantham homes still for sale after a month, the market is starting to level out and if you are keen to sell, then let me give you some advice.
Research has shown that if the asking price is initially set too high, it will be ignored by people surfing Rightmove and Zoopla.
(Come on, be honest โ you have done that yourself havenโt you?)
When the property is eventually reduced because it has the stigma of being on the property market too long (begging the question of potential buyers that there may be a problem with the property itself hence no interest?), often when it does eventually sell, it will sell for less than what it would have done if it were priced correctly from day one (as per two reports from Which in 2017 and 2019).
Of course, on the other hand, setting the asking price below its market value means potentially leaving money on the table needlessly โ hence the need for a good agent.
Putting your Grantham home or buy-to-let investment up for sale at the right price from the beginning is the key to selling within the best time price and for the best time frame to a serious and motivated buyer.
Ask a handful of Estate Agents to value your home, and ask them to back up any valuation of your Grantham with cold hard comparables of similar properties to yours.
Find your own comparables by searching ALL of the property portals (i.e. Rightmove / Zoopla/ Boomin / On The Market).
If you only take away one thing from this article, when you search the portals for comparables, make sure you include under offer/ sold STC properties, as that will triple the comparable evidence.
Thus, by your doing your homework and then working with a dependable, trustworthy and experienced Grantham Estate Agent, who will help to ensure that your Grantham property is put on the market to get you, the homeowner, the best price from day one without overcooking it so you lose out, you will be just fine.
These are my thoughts, let me know if you have any yourself?