2 in 3 say 'affordable' housing should be under £120,000

2 in 3 believe affordable housing should cost less than £120,000 - half the amount stated in the Government's Housing and Planning Bill, which is currently being debated in Parliament, according to myhomemove.


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Monday 9th November 2015

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66% believed homes should be priced at under £120,000 to qualify as affordable; while only 1% of respondents felt this figure could rise to above £250,000, bringing the definition in line with the Government’s ceiling price for homes outside the capital.

Doug Crawford, CEO of myhomemove, said:

“In his speech given on 7th October, the Prime Minister promised to build 200,000 starter homes during his tenure; houses which people could afford to buy with a capped price of £450,000 inside London and £250,000 outside the capital. While we welcome initiatives designed to increase housing stock numbers, our research shows that these homes are far too expensive for the majority of the population to consider affordable.

“Last month, our own data showed that one in 20 homes are bought using a gifted deposit. So even with an accelerated building programme to ease the shortage issue, unless these properties are capped at a much lower rate, very few families will be able to afford these ‘affordable’ homes.”

Author:
Rozi Jones Editor Editor
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