Property December 8, 2025
     

Why Waiting Might Cost You More

Over the past 18 months, one buyer trend has stood out above all others: hesitation.

People want to move; they intend to move, and then they wait.

Sometimes, for prices to drop.

Sometimes, for rates to fall.

Sometimes for “the perfect moment”.

But here's the truth: most people don’t move because the timing is perfect.

They move because their life needs them to.

If you’ve been sitting on the fence, here are five things to consider before waiting any longer.

 

 

1. The Market Is More Stable Than the Headlines Suggest

Between interest rate speculation and dramatic news coverage, it’s easy to believe the market is on the edge of something huge.

Reality? It’s calmer than it has been in years.

Prices in most areas have flattened, neither falling sharply nor rising dramatically, creating a rare sweet spot: predictability.

Buying in a predictable market is often far less stressful than buying in a hot or falling one.

 

 

2. Mortgage Rates Have Settled, and Could Move Either Way

Many buyers are waiting for the “big drop” in mortgage rates.

But the recent Budget and Bank of England guidance point to gentle adjustments, not dramatic shifts.

In other words, you might wait six months for a rate that’s only 0.25% lower; meanwhile, the right home might have come and gone.

If you find a home that fits your needs and your budget, sometimes it’s wiser to secure it now than chase small, uncertain savings later.

 

 

3. The Best Homes Never Wait Around

Buyers who’ve been searching for months will tell you this: every so often, a home appears that ticks every box, and it sells quickly.

While average days-on-market may be longer, good homes (the well-looked-after ones in popular roads, close to transport, with the right layout) still draw strong interest.

Waiting rarely works in your favour when you’re competing for the top 10% of properties.

 

 

4. Your Personal Timeline Matters More Than Market Timing

People outgrow homes.

Families expand.

Commutes change.

Finances improve.

Lifestyle priorities shift.

If your current home no longer suits you, that problem won’t disappear because you waited three more months.

Your life - not the headlines - is the real clock.

 

5. The Cost of Waiting Isn’t Just Financial

Delaying a move can mean:

Another year in a home that doesn’t fit

Longer commutes

Missed school catchments

Stalled lifestyle plans

More stress than necessary

Buying a home is both a financial and emotional decision.

If the numbers work and the move improves your life, waiting might hold you back more than it protects you.

 

Ready to Move with Confidence?

If you’re thinking about buying, we’re here to help you cut through the noise, understand the market clearly, and make a move when it’s right for *you*.

No pressure. Just honest guidance so you can move forward with confidence.

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At Good Life Homes, we have a simple business approach:

"To treat all clients in the manner we would like to be treated ourselves".


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