Moving to a bigger home is
something Burgess Hill people with growing young families aspire to. Many
people in two bedroom homes move to a three-bedroom home and some even make the
jump to a four-bed home. Bigger homes, especially three bed Burgess Hill homes
are much in demand and it can be a costly move.
If you live in Burgess
Hill in a two-bedroom property and wish to move to a four-bedroom house in Burgess
Hill, you would need to spend an additional £194,766 (or £769.33 pm in mortgage
payments (based on the UK Bank average standard variable rate)). However, going
straight to a four bed from a two-bed home is quite rare as most people jump
from a two to three-bedroom home, then later in life, from a three to four-bedroom
home.
I then decided to
calculate what it would cost to make the jump upmarket from one bedroom to two
bedrooms, two to three bedrooms etc. both in actual money and in mortgage
payments (using the current standard variable rate of UK Banks of 4.74% - so the
mortgage cost could be higher or lower depending on the mortgage taken).
There are some interesting
jumps in costs when moving upmarket as a Burgess Hill buyer. The cost of moving
from one to two beds, and two to three beds is relatively reasonable, whilst the jump from three to four beds in Burgess
Hill is quite high (and hence why some four bed properties are taking slightly
longer to sell nowadays). On an aside, a lesson here for all my landlord
property blog readers, you can quite clearly see why the larger 4 and 5 bed
properties don’t offer the best returns for buy to let because the monthly finance
costs and rents achieved don’t match up so well (i.e. A mortgage for a 4 bed home in Burgess Hill would cost you 33.88% compared
to a 3 bed mortgage, but the jump in rent would be a lot less than that.)
The most active purchasers
are 20 something and 30 something home-owning parents with growing families.
Many look to more modern developments for the perfect balance of access to
decent primary schools, commutability and lifestyle. For landlords looking to buy
within Burgess Hill, they face stiff competition from these 20/30 something
families, making the three bedroom Burgess Hill home massively in demand, often
attracting spirited offers and selling within weeks of listing. This mix of homebuyers
and landlords is a pressure point in the Burgess Hill property market.
Yet, the cost of an additional
bedroom can be too much for some Burgess Hill buyers. It is quite challenging moving
home the first time, but to then find you are priced out on the next move up
the ladder can be quite disconcerting, with families often having to move to a
different part of town to get the bigger home they need.
Nevertheless, that’s the place
many homeowners find themselves in with the cost of the additional bedroom
being too much to bear. To those buying their home for the first time, all I
suggest is they not only consider the mortgage payments and other costs of
their first home, but also do their homework into their next rung up the Burgess
Hill property ladder. Thinking about it now will keep you ahead of the game in
the future; as your number of bedrooms, family property needs and lifestyle
wants change.
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