Brexit ‘could cause 5% fall in house prices’

Online estate agent eMoov.co.uk has predicted that an EU exit for the UK could see its house prices fall by 5%.

The firm recently surveyed over 1,000 UK homeowners and found 55% of those asked, believed leaving the EU would impact the value of their property – 34% think they could increase, 21% think they could decrease.

Since Great Britain joined the EU in 1973, the average house price has increased by over 2,000%. However eMoov believe that it won’t necessarily be leaving the EU itself that could see house prices drop, but the uncertainty amongst homeowners and buyers as to what will happen next.

eMoov believe that an EU exit would cause a ‘nervous ripple effect’ across the UK, with homeowners and potential buyers deciding to wait and see what the ramifications could be – will unemployment rise? GDP fall? Could exports fall, causing businesses to fail?

eMoov says the resulting potential reduction in demand for housing will almost certainly cool the market and, as a result, house prices will reduce in turn to reflect this, the estate agent argues. In an already inflated UK market this could lead to a potential loss of £11,000 to the average UK homeowner, it claims.

CEO of eMoov.co.uk, Russell Quirk, said: “Should the UK public vote to leave the EU, we believe it could have a detrimental knock on effect to the UK property market. We’ve been part of the EU for over 40 years now, so it’s understandable that such a momentous change will lead to uncertainty amongst the UK public, as to the resulting implications an exit will have on them.

“This air of uncertainty will lead to inaction amongst those looking to buy and sell and the resulting dwindle in demand, will always lead to a reduction in house prices. We believe it could easily drop by 5% maybe more, so the average UK homeowner could see their property reduce by £11,000 in value.

“Since we joined the EU the average UK house price has increased by more than 2,000%, but even just the potential of an EU exit could start to slow the market. So the results of a yes vote on the main stage of the EU could have a much larger impact on the UK as a whole.”

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