Which rental properties are selling within weeks right now?
Houses are attracting the strongest demand at the moment, particularly in the North West and the Midlands.
Demand among both first time buyers and new investors is highest at the lower end of the market.
Examples include:
• North West – Typically £80k–£130k houses (Liverpool, Chester/Wirral, Manchester-type stock)
• North East / Yorkshire – Typically £50k–£100k houses (Sheffield, Doncaster, Newcastle)
• Midlands – Typically £90k–£150k houses (Nottingham, Birmingham, Leicester)
• Wales – Typically £60k–£110k houses (North Wales, Cardiff, South Wales)
Where speed matters, houses usually enjoy an advantage because they appeal to more than one type of buyer. A young family may value the garden, parking space or extra bedroom, whereas service charges for flats and having to consider lease length and potential lease extension costs are the biggest off-put to both types of buyers.
Flats can and do sell, of course, particularly in stronger urban locations and at sensible price points, yet the buyer pool is often narrower. That doesn’t make flats unsellable, but it does mean houses frequently have the edge.
The strongest areas are rarely a mystery
Across many recent transactions, familiar patterns emerge. Parts of the North West continue to generate solid interest where homes are affordable and lettable. Selected Midlands towns and suburbs remain active, particularly where buyers can commute, and families want space. Certain Yorkshire and North East markets still offer enough value to attract attention. London is different, higher value, more postcode-sensitive, and far less forgiving of overpricing. Again, nothing revolutionary there, because buyers still want value, financeability and locations that make sense.
Price is where many sellers lose momentum
Some landlords become fixated on the number they would like to achieve rather than the range at which buyers are prepared to act. That can be an expensive mistake because the first burst of buyer interest when a property comes to market is often the most valuable. If that moment is lost through wishful pricing, the listing can quickly feel stale.
A realistic seller is not necessarily a cheap seller, but quite often, they use pricing to create competition.
In many cases, the focus is often on achieving the highest possible price. That is understandable, but in the case of rental property, the true cost of selling might be more complicated. For example, if the property is tenanted, some buyers will only proceed with vacant possession. That can create a number of issues, such as:
- the cost and delay of obtaining vacant possession
- the risk of tenants stopping rent once notice has been served
- legal costs if matters become contested
- mortgage payments continuing during the process
- insurance and utilities still needing to be paid
- council tax, sometimes at higher rates once empty
- loss of rental income during any void period
- redecorating to make the property saleable
- replacing tired carpets or flooring
- updating kitchens or bathrooms to attract owner-occupier buyers
- gardening, clearance, and general presentation costs
- estate agency fees on completion
- months of uncertainty while waiting for a buyer
- chains collapsing or buyers renegotiating late in the day
By the time all of that is added together it’s a lot of hassle and what’s the true cost?
That’s why some landlords might accept a slightly lower price in exchange for:
- speed of sale
- certainty
- no chain
- fewer viewings
- less stress
- quicker access to capital
- avoiding months of holding costs
A conversation worth having?
If you have been considering whether to sell, whether now is sensible timing, or simply which property you would choose to part with first, a proper review can be worthwhile.
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