Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18
UK Housing Ministry Plans Binding Home Deals to Curb £400m Gazundering Losses
Updated
Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

UK Housing Ministry Plans Binding Home Deals to Curb £400m Gazundering Losses

2 articles · Updated · bbc.co.uk · Jul 18

Summary

  • Legally binding property agreements would stop buyers in England and Wales from cutting agreed prices at the last minute or walking away without a valid reason, with fines planned for breaches.
  • 120 days now separate offer acceptance from completion on average, leaving sellers exposed because deals are not binding until contracts are exchanged; one in three sales collapse before then.
  • £400 million in annual seller losses and £1.5 billion in wider economic costs have pushed the reform, which the ministry says could cut transaction times by four weeks and save first-time buyers £650.
  • The Conveyancing Association says gazundering remains relatively rare but is rising in a buyers' market, and wants the reforms brought in before the current 2029 timetable.

Insights

With sales costing the economy £1.5 billion annually, why will crucial housing reforms take until 2029?
Could adopting Scotland's upfront information model be the simple fix to England's chaotic property market?
Are early binding contracts the answer, or will they unfairly trap buyers who discover major property defects?