Failed housing transactions cost £1.5 billion a year

Failed housing transactions cost consumers and the economy at least £1.5 billion every year, according to research published by Santander.

Failed housing transactions cost consumers and the economy at least £1.5 billion every year, according to research published by Santander.

The research says that over 530,000 transactions fall through every year due to the UK's antiquated homebuying process.

The economic analysis shows that the direct cost to consumers of this through expenditure on elements such as mortgage and solicitors' fees that consumers cannot recoup, is £560 million annually.

However, the impact is not just limited to consumers. The repercussions on the broader economy include the loss of work output due to stress and the time taken to buy a property within work hours, estimated at £380 million per year.

There is also the cost of people's reduced wellbeing, estimated to be £400 million and wasted leisure time, approximately £170 million.

David Morris, Head of Homes at Santander UK, said:

'The homebuying journey is still operating in the confines of a framework that was established a century ago. This antiquated system is an increasingly heavy anchor weighing on the economy and fixing it must be key.

'While the government has put the housing market firmly on its agenda – as this research shows - the scale of the challenge remains largely underappreciated, and that's why we're calling for powerful reforms to give buyers and sellers more confidence, ease the financial and emotional strain and create a housing system fit for the needs of today's consumers and economy.'

Contact Us

T: 01604 718866
E: info@phm-accountants.co.uk

Social

Home | Privacy | Site map | Contact us | Accessibility | Disclaimer | Help | Diversity Report

© 2025 Phipps Henson McAllister. All rights reserved.

powered by totalSOLUTION

We use cookies on this website, you can find more information about cookies here.

Phipps Henson McAllister are registered to carry on audit work in the UK and regulated for a range of investment business activities by the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England & Wales.

Details about our audit registration can be viewed at www.auditregister.org.uk for the UK, under reference number EWC008449569.

This firm is not authorised under the Financial Services and Markets Act 2000 but we are able in certain circumstances to offer a limited range of investment services to clients because we are members of the Institute of Chartered Accountants in England and Wales. We can provide these investment services if they are an incidental part of the professional services we have been engaged to provide.