House prices plunge as council acts on second homes
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House prices in a county where the council has introduced measures to crack down on second homes have fallen by more than 12% year-on-year, according to new figures.
The local authority in Gwynedd, north-west Wales, recently introduced a requirement to obtain planning permission to turn residential properties into second homes or holiday lets.
It is also one of a number of Welsh councils which charges a 150% council tax premium on such properties.
The council, Cyngor Gwynedd, said its aim was to âincrease the availability of high-quality, affordable homes for local peopleâ.
The fall in value represents the biggest annual drop of any region in the Principality Building Societyâs Wales House Price Index, covering residential property sales in the final three months of 2024.
The average house price in Wales has remained broadly flat year-on-year and is now ÂŁ233,194, according to the building society.
Tom Williams and his family, who live in Lancashire, are struggling to sell the second home they own in Morfa Nefyn, Gwynedd.
âI have four grandchildren who had a wonderful time there every summer and itâs been great, weâve loved it,â said Mr Williams, who has owned the house for 20 years.
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Mr Williams and his wife put the house on the market in April 2024 but said they had had little interest from potential buyers, despite dropping the price by ÂŁ40,000.
âI put it down to all the other properties in the village that are up for sale at the moment,â he said.
Mr Williams believes some of the interventions by the council have prompted a lot of people to sell, while also putting off potential buyers.
Cyngor Gwynedd has been trying to address the shortage of housing for local people in tourist areas and has more than doubled the council tax charge on second and holiday homes.
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The council also recently introduced Article 4, which requires property owners to obtain planning permission to turn residential homes into second or holiday homes.
âIâve spoken to a lot of families who have had homes there for generations and theyâre saying the same thing â how can we carry on with this?â said Mr Williams.
North Wales estate agent Dafydd Hardy described the housing market in Gwynedd as âmixedâ, with local interventions on second homes leading to âmore properties coming on to the marketâ.
But he said the price of a second home was often âoutside the affordability of the local purchaserâ.
âWhat we need to see is balance in the market,â he said, including âmore house building as far as first-time buyers are concernedâ.
Whatâs caused the price drop?
The Principality Building Societyâs figures are based on seasonally-adjusted data from the Land Registry, but a lot of different factors can affect the picture that data ends up painting.
Factors such as interest rates, regional job opportunities, and possibly interventions in the local housing market by a council, may have an impact on house prices, but so could statistical issues such as how many transactions can be counted in any three month period and whether a set of figures is simply a blip.
So that means thereâs some uncertainty about what caused the drop in prices in Gwynedd in the year to December and it will be interesting to see what future data tells us about the housing market in the year to come.
How have house prices changed in the rest of Wales?
According to the Wales House Price Index, Pembrokeshire saw the second biggest annual fall in prices at 8.9%.
The council there recently voted to reduce the council tax premium on second homes from 200% to 150%.
By comparison, Carmarthenshire saw the biggest year-on-year increase in house prices at 9.2%.
The council there is introducing a council tax premium of 100% on second homes from April.
Iain Mansfield of the Principality Building Society said the housing market across Wales had shown âresilienceâ over the past 12 months.
Sales were up by 28% year-on-year, which Mr Mansfield said demonstrated âgreater consumer confidenceâ with lower interest rates making mortgages more affordable.
âI think weâre seeing a more positive outlook for those people who want to buy a house in 2025,â said Mr Mansfield.
Locals âpriced outâ
Mr Mansfield said the âsizeableâ drop in prices in Gwynedd over the past year was reflected in âsome of the other coastal areas in Walesâ.
He said the drop could âpotentiallyâ be explained by âsome of the interventions that have been made in the area around second home ownershipâ.
Cyngor Gwynedd said âover 65% of Gwyneddâs population was priced out of the housing marketâ and tackling the housing shortage was a âkey priorityâ.
It said it introduced Article 4 to âgain better control over the existing housing stockâ and they were âcontinuously monitoring its effectsâ.
It added some of the money raised by the council tax premium was used to enable âthe development of new homes, the creation of supported accommodation for those facing homelessness and grants and loans to help local people secure housing, amongst many other projectsâ.