House sale over Christmas
Author
Discussion

Jasandjules

Original Poster:

71,222 posts

245 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
Looking to put the house on the market. Is it worth doing next week or do we wait until the New Year?

Will people be actively house hunting over Christmas?

If so, do we put up decorations or leave it plain?!?!

Answers on a postcard, well, a post at least. All opinions welcome.

JoshSm

1,721 posts

53 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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Unless you're really in a rush probably better to wait until everyone is back working and not either on holiday or thinking about it?

There might be a buyer out there thinking this is a perfect time but I'd bet estate agents etc will have wound down for a week or two.

sherman

14,516 posts

231 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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People want to be in for Christmas.
The market will slowing down this month.
I would use Christmas to get the house decluttered and ready to list in the new year.

MitchT

16,809 posts

225 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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As a potential buyer the best time to look at and buy a house is when the house I want comes up for sale. Don't care what time of year it is. Over Christmas is actually a better time for me to go looking as I have quite a bit of time off.

w1bbles

1,151 posts

152 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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We're in the same position for my MIL's house. I spoke to an estate agent mate and his view is that nothing happens between now and the end of January, and we should probably delay listing until the last week of January. We may move quickly anyway because the house has a view that I reckon is in the top 10 in the UK and if we can reach the right buyer they will probably jump on it in a flash despite Christmas getting in the way. We're going to decorate it to make it feel a bit more lived-in if that helps with your decision. This may be an irrelevance as there is already a queue of people trying to get in early and get it immediately. Location is west coast Scotland.

Stick Legs

7,605 posts

181 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
I’d not list until early in the new year.

1) If you have decorations up it will look stupid in the listings in February!

2) There is often a furry of interest in the new year because people realise that they need more space for the family (nothing makes your house feel smaller thsn filling it with trees & people!).

3) Sometimes, sadly, Christmas is the final straw for some relationships so people who previously lived in one house together now want one each.

Motorman74

477 posts

37 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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I'd wait - as said before use the time constructively, declutter, touch up and damage to decor, clear up fallen leaves in the garden etc.

People are going to be busier on the run up to the festive season. I've just helped my sister move on the weekend - that's probably as close to Christmas as I'd want to get to be honest.

If you list now and get no interest, you'll be lost amongst the new listings people haven't seen before on the new year, and priority for viewing yours will be lower.

Obviously you could list now and be exactly what someone wants and get a sale immediately - but that would put exchange/completion potentially right in the festive period or the new year anyway.

loskie

6,353 posts

136 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
surely the agents will be closed, skeleton staffed and/or can't be arsed over Christmas so who will take the calls for the viewings for you? Solicitors too will be pretty much unavailable for submitting offers.

Plus as said Christmas decorations will look odd.

UNLESS folks will be on holiday in that location for Christmas themselves and be looking for that second home or retirement dream home. If so sell it yourself .

Edited by loskie on Sunday 1st December 16:14

Baroque attacks

5,765 posts

202 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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What type of house, where abouts?

Huzzah

28,118 posts

199 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
No decs, get house on asap.

Christmas is a mental block "we'll start looking after Christmas" etc. Boxing day attracts browsers on RM.

OutInTheShed

11,773 posts

42 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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It tends to take a while to put a house onthe market these days.
They want photos to be done, a floorplan and a EPC.

Unless you got these already, I reckon it's fairly tight to get the house on Rightmove by xmas already.

It may even take you a while to choose between estate agents?
They offer different details and may send you contracts that need revising.
Estate agents take holiday too.

Personally, I would get it on the market ASAP, even if you don't accept any viewing until Jan 2 or whenever.
Or, go with the advice of your chosen agent, they may like to launch it in a particular way at a particular time.

For one thing, vendors' agents may not take you seriously until yours in the pipeline, and for another there may just be a buyer out there who is about to commit elesewhere.

Little Lofty

3,653 posts

167 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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One of my most successful local agents lists loads of properties on Boxing day as apparently it’s one of Rightmoves busiest days, December is usually pretty dead though.

mike_e

593 posts

279 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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I'd agree with Boxing day being a busy time for agents, I was told that by my agent too. My son sold his house last week and is now actively looking. Even if he finds somewhere now he clearly won't be moving before Xmas, the searches, surveys and contracts all take time to arrange.

You may want to consider the SDLT (stamp duty) relief is halving this April, that may add a bit of a stimulus to the market this year. It'll make £6250 difference to the cost of buying on properties over £250k. 3 months isn't unusual to complete a property sale so if you're selling I'd list it now.

pacenotes

373 posts

160 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
The busiest day of the year on Rightmove is the 26th Dec. Get the photos done and get it on the week before Christmas with viewings in the new year.

2 reasons,

Houses feel small during Christmas and people want to move up.

People split up....

Edited by pacenotes on Sunday 1st December 21:52

Downward

4,727 posts

119 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
quotequote all
Boxing day is supposed to be the big launch day so we are relaunching then.
House is on the market but little interest.
New agents appointed and new photos are being done next week.

As for Christmas Decs, No room for a tree until the work desk comes down.


Turtle Shed

2,152 posts

42 months

Sunday 1st December 2024
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Very few reasons not to in my opinion.

Get the EA to photograph it before the decorations are up, and then again after Christmas if it hasn't sold.

Out there, right now, might be someone who would love to buy your house, and they really won't give a toss about whether there are decorations up.

wcel

171 posts

191 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
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mike_e said:
You may want to consider the SDLT (stamp duty) relief is halving this April, that may add a bit of a stimulus to the market this year. It'll make £6250 difference to the cost of buying on properties over £250k.
£2500 difference, not £6250, because only 2% is payable on amounts between £125k and £250k

LaserTam

2,175 posts

235 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
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I would have said wait, but ours was already on the market last year, had a viewing a week before Christmas and 2nd viewing on Christmas Eve. They now live in that house and preparing for their first Christmas there.

Slow.Patrol

2,244 posts

30 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
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The house we own went on the market on Christmas Eve.

We viewed it on New Year's Eve and agreed a deal on 4th Jan and moved in on 8th April.

Anyone looking at the moment will be genuine and motivated.

Mr Whippy

31,370 posts

257 months

Monday 2nd December 2024
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We’re doing it.

Going up this week. Photographed a few days back.

The house we want to buy is available and we need to be sold stc to progress so only one way to go.

But once we’ve got an offer, the occupiers of the place we’re buying will need to find somewhere too so I assume the chain will slow stuff down to the point we won’t be exchanging/completing until way into Jan/Feb.


Plus stamp duty changing might be a kicker.

And mortgage rates possibly going up.

Spring might be a bit of a rough time if demand is low despite more supply.