With Rayners Lane homes only taking 42 days to sell, why are so many people missing out???

With Rayners Lane homes only taking 42 days to sell, why are so many people missing out???

With Rayners Lane homes only taking 42 days to sell, there are many stories of people missing out on properties before they even come onto the market. Yet, many Rayners Lane home buyers are missing out because they fail to do this one simple thing.

How Many Days Does It Take to Sell a Rayners Lane Home?

Whether you are a Rayners Lane homeowner, first-time buyer or landlord; the last 15 months has been a roller coaster ride when it comes to the Rayners Lane property market.

With 213,120 UK house buyers and 58,580 UK tenants moving home in June, the summer has been manic for many people. Meaning some Rayners Lane homeowners are asking if they should be staying put? Or should they wait for the best home to come onto the market before putting their home up for sale or find a buyer but be unable to find a property – it’s all rather confusing.

Then we have some Rayners Lane landlords who are asking themselves if they should buy another property investment (and some even wondering if they should sell and cash in on the boom) and then finally, with 95% mortgages back, first-time buyers are asking if they should look to take the plunge and buy their first home or wait.

In this article, I hope I can help you with the decisions you might want to make and to navigate this unusual post lockdown housing market. Let me start with some stats to show you what is happening at the moment in Rayners Lane.

The average time it takes to sell a Rayners Lane (HA2) property in
this housing market is 42 days.
 
Interesting when compared with nearby Harrow at 51 days, Eastcote at 51 days, Pinner at 43 days and Northolt at 37 days.
 
Look back five years, it took 36 days on average to sell
 a Rayners Lane.

The property market has certainly solidified a little over the last few weeks. The Stamp Duty holiday rush has seen its run and the pent-up post-Brexit and more importantly post-lockdown demand has receded and although I am still observing competing offers on most Rayners Lane properties, I certainly get a feeling of a small shift in the balance-of-power between the seller and buyer.

Many people have put their house hunting on hold as they go on their first holiday since 2019, be that glamping in Cornwall or having days out on a ‘staycation’. That means between now and mid-September, depending on what type of property you are looking for, many buyers could well discover that there are fewer competitors for their next home than there might be.

Also, July and August are notoriously barren months for estate agents putting new properties up for sale. Yet since the typical ‘seasonal property market’ is so out of kilter as a result of the pandemic, many agents are taking on a decent number of very good properties now, which is not something that characteristically would have happened in the summer months.

The important thing is not to wait for the property to hit the portals (i.e. Rightmove etc). Yet research shows, nearly 5 out of 6 people who bought their home were not on the agents mailing list before they viewed the home they eventually bought. That’s OK in a normal property market as you can wait until it hits Rightmove or Zoopla, yet these are unprecedented times and if you are not on an agent’s mailing list - you will miss out on properties. This is where our heads up alert service is so crucial when looking to buy - find out more here

If you don’t put yourself on the agent’s mailing lists, you could end up losing out on the property of your dreams.

So, the question is should you put your Rayners Lane home on the market first or wait for the right property to come along?

Roll the clock back a few years and it was standard practice for people to wait for their dream home to come onto the market, then put theirs on and hope that it would sell in time. This housing market is different and only those who are in a position to proceed (cash buyers or those sold subject to contract) will be considered as serious buyers.

Yet, nobody wants to be homeless if they do sell.

Estate agents are returning back to their old skills from the 1980s and 1990s by chain building. By starting at the bottom of the chain of the smaller house and building up a chain, waiting for everybody to find their next homes, nobody need be made homeless.

This is not an issue because most house sales are taking on average between 20 and 25 weeks and as long as everybody communicates with each other and everyone knows where they are, then normally things go through, albeit slower. Can you believe it – estate agents really are earning their money with this!

So what Rayners Lane homes are selling the fastest?

Rayners Lane Terraced and Town Houses are selling in 28 days
Rayners Lane Semi-Detached Houses are selling in 30 days
Rayners Lane Detached Houses are selling in 81 days
Rayners Lane Apartments are selling in 69 days


So, there you have it. The lessons I hope you have now learnt from this are to put yourself on agent’s mailing lists, talk to agents about your requirements so you get a heads up first when a property is coming onto the market (don’t just do everything over a computer screen) and once you have found a property be a little bit more patient with how long it takes to build a chain and then get the property through to an exchange and completion so you get the keys to your forever home.

Whether you are a Rayners Lane homeowner, Rayners Lane landlord or first-time buyer and would like some advice and opinion on your circumstances in the current Rayners Lane property market, please don’t hesitate to either pick up the phone or drop me a message.

To everyone else, what are your thoughts on the Rayners Lane property market?




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