Welcome to your monthly property update!

Welcome to your monthly property update!




How to make a good first impression on your new neighbours

 

Moving into a new property at a new location can bring a whirlwind of emotions, including stress, excitement, and a slight apprehension, but it’s essential to create a positive impression on your new neighbours.  

Your neighbours play a vital part in keeping you and your property safe, so it's crucial to create a good, solid relationship.  

Start with a simple introduction  

When relocating into a new home, you should approach your new neighbours at the first chance and introduce yourself. A great way to confidently do this is by approaching them and beginning your relationship with a kind, simple smile and introduction, creating a solid foundation.  

Having this first interaction creates an important first impression and can help you identify what your new neighbours are like, potentially preventing future disputes.  

Keep your surrounding property tidy  

Whether you live in an apartment, a terraced, semi-detached, or detached property, you may have shared-cared spaces you look after with your neighbours. This could be a shared drive, fence, or pathway, so it’s important that you communicate clearly and create a rotation of care for the shared space to avoid disputes.  

It is vital that you help maintain these spaces and create a clean environment in your community. By having an untidy entrance or drive to your home, it can imprint a negative impression on your neighbours and potentially make their property look untidy. So, by simply sweeping around your property to remove any loose leaves or debris, you can make a positive impression on your neighbours.  

Property garden maintenance  

Maintaining your property's surroundings also includes keeping your garden well-groomed to produce a beautiful appearance. You can simply care for your garden by ensuring your grass doesn't overgrow with a weekly cut and potentially planting some bulbs, which will allow effortless flowers to appear every year. Don't become the property that everyone avoids; instead, impress your neighbours with a well-cared-for garden.  

Neighbouring hedges and fences  

When it comes to first impressions with your neighbour, disputes can easily be encouraged if you are sharing a fence or hedge. This is extremely common, so before making any changes to any hedges or fences, it is key to discuss your options with your neighbour and ensure you receive the green light. Your neighbours will appreciate the discussion, demonstrating clear communication from your end and an excellent first impression.  

Home improvements  

When moving into a new property, sometimes you want to make slight home improvements, which can potentially cause disruption to your new neighbours. Keeping your neighbours informed and providing them with notice of any completed work is crucial.
Being a good neighbour means being considerate of others and being aware of the little things. For example, outdoor flood lighting can shine into your neighbouring homes, disturbing their privacy, or an outdoor shed could disturb their garden's sunlight. Being aware of the little things can create a good first impression on your neighbours.  

Be a considerate neighbour  

When moving to a new home, it’s vital to be a good, kind neighbour and considerate of your surroundings. This can be as simple as not being disruptive with noise pollution, taking your rubbish bins out at the correct times, parking in the correct place; there are so many unwritten rules of being a good neighbour and creating a good first impression.  

Clear communication is a key rule to maintaining a positive relationship with your neighbours and keeping you and your community safe. Exchanging numbers with your neighbour allows you to communicate clearly if you feel something suspicious is occurring. The more people you know in your area, the safer you and your property will be.  

For more information on moving the right way, contact us today



The 10 steps to successful home renovations

 

If you're considering upgrading a potential property through a home renovation, it can be an exciting process, but it can also present challenges. Instead of buying a move-in-ready property, you have the option of renovating a character-filled, fixer-upper. We have compiled 10 steps to follow to guarantee success throughout a home renovation.

Step one: Find a property and make a renovation plan

With our 10 steps to successful renovations, you can easily lay out a plan and begin your renovation journey. But to begin your renovation adventure, you need to find the right property. Study potential properties and uncover their hidden value.

Make sure to have a survey completed. The most detailed survey you can receive for a property is a level 3 survey, which is the most thorough analysis of the entire property’s building structure and condition. The overall report provides extensive details, including recommendations, estimated costs, and a timeline for any necessary work. This can help you produce a solid plan and give you an idea of where to start.

Step two: Understand your legalities

When you decide to complete renovations on a property, you need to understand the legalities. This will include ensuring you have planning permission in place (if needed). Even though plenty of home alterations don’t need planning permission, it’s always beneficial to check before diving straight in. You can apply for planning permission before you purchase a property.

Once you exchange contracts and have secured your property, it will be your responsibility to have the right insurance in place. Home insurance during renovations can come at a higher expense, but it is worth every penny as it provides you with peace of mind throughout the entire process.

Although a house warranty is not a requirement when renovating your property, it protects you from any flaws in the potential design, materials, or overall build quality, and will also cover any problems that occur for 10 years as a result of these factors.

Step three: Calculate your costs

Correct cost alignment is crucial for delivering a successful renovation project. You're looking to get the best value for money. Being vigilant about potential hidden costs is crucial to staying within the right budget. Always overbudget by 10% to provide yourself with flexibility, and you can utilise any remaining funds for enhancing your home's interior design or landscaping your ideal garden.

Step four: Understand EPC and ways you could improve it

If you’re renovating your home, consider the future and its resale value. Energy Performance Certificates (EPC) are now more important than ever in terms of increasing value; the future may create difficulties for homes without a good EPC score, so the quicker you take this into account, the better.

You can enhance your EPC rating by installing insulation in your home and surrounding pipes, replacing light bulbs with energy-efficient ones, upgrading your boiler and heating system, installing solar panels, a smart meter, and installing double or triple-glazed windows.

Step five: Discover a trustworthy contractor

This is a crucial step because this individual will bring your ideas to life. Become your own project manager and oversee the entire project, and if you’re a seasoned pro, get stuck in and knock a few walls down. Shop arounFd, gather ideas from different contractors, and take into account positive references and reviews.

Step six: Organise the removal of materials

A renovation project always leads to plenty of waste, especially if the demolition of walls is part of the plan. By organising a skip hire for the property, you can create less hassle for everyone involved, and the skip hire company will be able to dispose of the materials. You could potentially sell certain elements of the property to generate additional revenue.

Step seven: Protect the property’s original features

The main attraction when you buy a fixer-upper is the original character features. These can easily be rediscovered and highlighted throughout the home renovation, adding a timeless charm to the property. By utilising these original features, you have a chance to save some money on new materials. Particular attention should be paid to certain features such as:

  • Windows
  • Flooring
  • Fireplaces
  • Ceilings
  • Borders

While renovating, remain careful around these areas to avoid potential damage to the original features.

Step eight: Update your plumbing and electrics

Even though rewiring and plumbing are expensive renovations, they're definitely worth it. This allows you to add certain light features or bathroom looks that suit your lifestyle. By completing this, you could also add characteristics that cut down your energy bill and increase your EPC rating, improving the property’s end value.

Step nine: Turn structural problems into upgrades

While the property is stripped back, this gives you the perfect opportunity to fix or improve any structural issues in the home. This allows you to match the home to modern-day living, potentially creating an open-plan living space or inserting large bi-fold doors leading to the garden.

Take a look at the floor plan, external and internal features, and identify the potential characteristics it could offer. Is there conversion potential for the loft, basement, or garage?  Identifying these key potentials can present a substantial increase in your property’s value.

Step ten: Create a snagging list

As you finalise the property by adding all your interior and décor, you finally see the light at the end of the tunnel.

What is a snagging list?

A snagging list typically indicates that the home renovation is complete. This is an inspection completed at the end of building work to identify any minor defects and meet the standards you expect, potentially achieving perfection.

Examine your completed project and pinpoint any minor issues you wish to address or monitor to allow issues to be flagged up in a timely manner. The contractor can assist in resolving these issues, ensuring a flawless completion of the project.

 

Ready to start your renovation journey? Contact us today to find your
potential fixer-upper

 



Selling tips for January 2025

As we step into the new year, January 2025 presents an excellent opportunity for homeowners looking to sell their properties. The start of the year often brings motivated buyers eager to kickstart their property search, while a fresh market outlook creates an ideal window for sellers. However, achieving a successful sale in January requires careful planning, strategic presentation, and awareness of current market trends. Below are key selling tips to help you maximise your property's potential this January.

First impressions matter

The first impression your property makes is crucial, and in January, kerb appeal remains essential despite the colder weather. Ensure your front garden, driveway, and entrance are tidy and welcoming. Clear away any debris, add potted winter plants, and ensure exterior lighting is functioning properly to create a warm welcome.

Stage your home for winter appeal

Buyers viewing properties in January will appreciate a warm and inviting atmosphere. Use soft lighting, warm blankets, and cosy furnishings to create an appealing space. If possible, ensure the heating is on during viewings to make your home feel comfortable and welcoming.

Price realistically from the start

Pricing your property correctly from the outset is essential to attract serious buyers. Research local property prices, consider recent sales in your area, and consult with a reputable estate agent to ensure your asking price reflects current market conditions.

Highlight energy efficiency

Energy costs remain a significant concern for buyers, especially during the winter months. If your property has energy-efficient features, such as double glazing, smart thermostats, or good insulation, make sure these are highlighted in your marketing materials.

Be flexible with viewings

Buyers' schedules can be unpredictable, particularly in January when many people return to work after the holiday season. Be as flexible as possible with viewing times to accommodate potential buyers and maximise your chances of securing offers.

Work with an experienced estate agent

Partnering with an experienced estate agent who understands the nuances of the January market can make all the difference. They can offer tailored advice, effective marketing strategies, and skilled negotiation to ensure your property stands out.

Prepare necessary paperwork in advance

Having all necessary paperwork ready can streamline the sales process and avoid delays. Ensure your property title deeds, energy performance certificate (EPC), and other essential documents are readily available. 

Understand buyer motivations

January buyers are often driven by clear goals, such as relocating for work, downsizing, or taking advantage of the fresh start a new year offers. Understanding these motivations can help tailor your approach to meet their needs.

Conclusion

Selling your home in January 2025 offers unique advantages, from motivated buyers to a fresh market outlook. By focusing on presentation, pricing, and strategic marketing, sellers can maximise their property's appeal and achieve a successful sale. Start your selling journey with confidence, and make January the month your property finds its perfect buyer.

 

Ready to sell your home? Contact us today for expert guidance and support

 



April's Comedy in Twyford  20 April 2024

We've got three of the best comedians working in the country, that you'll have seen all over your TV's...

Click here to read April's Comedy in Twyford  20 April 2024.



A Fistful of Clary 30 May 2024

Julian Clary, renowned homosexual and national trinket, is fixing to saddle up and head on out for a brand-new 2024 UK tour...

Click here to read A Fistful of Clary 30 May 2024.



The Hawthorns, Charvil, RG10

Grapevine Estate Agents offer to the market a four double bedroom detached property in a quiet cul de sac within...
Guide Price £1,050,000

Click here to read The Hawthorns, Charvil, RG10.



Wargrave Road, Twyford, RG10

Grapevine Estate agent take pleasure in presenting an impressive five-bedroom detached house...
 
Guide Price £1,650,000

Click here to read Wargrave Road, Twyford, RG10.



Marvellous Festival 2026
Saturday, 18th July 2026

Marvellous is coming at you once again and our giant festival stage hosts a massive 14 world-class tributes to some of the greatest acts of our time, while our second...

Click here to read Marvellous Festival 2026
Saturday, 18th July 2026
.



The pricing reality: Properties selling in 32 days vs 99 days

Numbers in property reporting are often treated as background noise. Averages, indices, month-on-month changes: they accumulate and blur. But occasionally a pairing of figures is stark enough to cut through, and the gap between 32 days and 99 days is one of them. That is the difference between how long it takes a correctly priced property to find a buyer and how long it takes one that has required a price reduction. It is not a marginal difference. It is a gap of more than two months, and it has direct, measurable consequences for every seller it applies to.

Why accurately priced homes move faster
A property that launches at an accurate price captures the full attention of its buyer pool in the first two to three weeks on the market. Buyers with alerts set up see it immediately. Agents contact their registered applicants. The listing appears prominently as something new and relevant. That early window generates the viewings and, in a well-functioning market, the offer.

The pattern is consistent and not coincidental. Markets where prices are well calibrated to buyer budgets move quickly. Where sellers are asking above what buyers are prepared to pay, properties sit longer, and those that sit longest are almost always the ones that eventually reduce.

What the 99-day figure actually reflects
A property that launches above market value generates a different kind of response. Buyers who have been actively researching their target area for weeks or months recognise the overpricing and look elsewhere. The early window passes without converting. Days become weeks, and weeks become months. When a price reduction does follow, buyers who return tend to arrive with a negotiating posture shaped by the knowledge that the seller has already moved once.

The result is a longer process and, in most cases, a lower final achieved price than accurate opening pricing would have produced. For sellers who are also purchasing simultaneously, the chain implications of that delay compound the difficulty further.

What the current market means for pricing
The market heading into summer 2026 is functioning well, but it is more measured than the supply-constrained conditions of 2021 and 2022. Buyers have more choice than they have had for several years, and they are using that choice carefully. Mortgage rates, while improving gradually, remain a consideration for many purchasers, which means buyers are assessing value with more scrutiny than in a faster-moving market.

In these conditions, a property that is not competitively priced is not simply waiting a little longer for its buyer. It is actively being passed over in favour of alternatives that represent clearer value. The gap between 32 days and 99 days is wider in a buyer-friendly market, not narrower, which makes the pricing decision at launch more consequential than ever.

What sellers can do with this information
The most useful thing a seller can take from this data is a clear-eyed approach to valuation. Comparable sold prices from the past three months, not asking prices visible on portals, and not what a neighbour achieved in a different market, are the appropriate benchmark. An agent who supports their recommended price with specific, recent sold evidence is giving you a figure grounded in current reality. One who gives a number at the top of a range without supporting data is giving you something considerably less reliable.

Pricing accurately does not mean undervaluing a property. It means arriving at a figure that reflects what motivated buyers in the current market will pay for your specific home. Do that, and the evidence points to finding a buyer in around a month. The 32-day outcome is not reserved for exceptional properties. It is consistently the result of preparation, presentation, and a price set with evidence rather than aspiration.

Get in touch to sell with the right strategy



Why summer evening viewings expand your buyer pool

The decision about when to allow viewings is one that most sellers make passively rather than deliberately. Weekday mornings, weekend afternoons, whatever fits around existing routines. It is an understandable approach, but in the summer months it leaves meaningful opportunity on the table, and the buyers you lose access to are often among the most motivated and financially prepared in the market.

Who cannot view during the day
The buyers most likely to be locked out of daytime viewings are those in full-time employment who cannot easily take time off work to view properties. This group represents a substantial share of the active buyer pool at any given moment. Working professionals, particularly those earlier in their careers or in roles with limited flexibility, frequently struggle to attend weekday daytime viewings. Asking them to take annual leave to view a property they have not yet decided they want is a significant barrier, and many will simply bypass properties where the viewing availability does not work around their schedule.

This matters most in a market where buyers have more choice than they have had for several years. With stock at its highest level for approximately eight years according to Zoopla's 2026 data, a buyer who cannot view your property conveniently has no shortage of alternatives to consider instead. Convenience is a filter that operates invisibly but consistently.

Why summer is the best time to offer evening viewings
The practical case for evening viewings exists year-round, but summer makes it genuinely compelling in a way that other seasons do not. From late May through to August, natural light in the UK persists until nine o'clock or later. A viewing at half past six or seven in the evening takes place in full daylight, with gardens visible, rooms lit naturally, and the property presented in conditions that are indistinguishable from a midday appointment.

Evening light in summer has an additional quality that midday light does not always provide. The lower angle of the sun in the early evening creates a warmth and softness that flatters interiors and gardens in ways that the harsher overhead light of midday often does not.

Properties with west-facing gardens or rooms benefit particularly from late afternoon and evening viewings, when the sun is in exactly the right position to demonstrate what the space can look like at its best. This is not a minor aesthetic consideration. It is the kind of detail that creates an emotional response in buyers, and emotional responses are what drive offers.

The practical effect
Offering evening viewing slots, even two or three evenings per week, opens your property to a cohort of buyers who are often better qualified than their daytime counterparts. Full-time professionals who are actively searching and prepared to view in the evening are demonstrating a level of intent and commitment that casual browsers typically do not. They have researched the property, decided it merits their time, and arranged their evening around seeing it. That is a buyer who arrives engaged and ready to assess seriously.

Estate agents report consistently that evening viewings in summer produce a disproportionate number of offers relative to their frequency. The buyers who attend are focused, the conditions are often flattering, and the absence of competing weekday daytime distraction means the viewing itself tends to be more thorough and more productive.

How to make evening viewings work well
The logistics of evening viewings require modest but worthwhile preparation. If you are still living in the property, ensure it is tidy and ready to be seen at the end of a working day rather than assuming the morning's preparation will hold. Gardens and outdoor spaces should be accessible and presentable, as buyers will naturally gravitate outside during a summer evening viewing. Any outdoor seating or entertaining space should be set up rather than stored away, helping buyers to imagine how they would use the space themselves.

Communicate your evening availability clearly to your agent and make sure it is reflected in any booking system. A seller who is hard to schedule will lose viewings to properties where the process is easier, regardless of the comparative quality of the homes involved. The goal is to remove as much friction as possible between a buyer's interest and their ability to stand in your property.

The competitive edge it creates
In a market where the properties selling most quickly are those that make the process easy for buyers, evening viewing availability is a simple and cost-free way to outperform competing listings. Most sellers do not offer it consistently. Those who do access a wider audience, generate more viewings, and give themselves a better chance of the competitive interest that leads to the strongest offers.

Summer evenings are one of the most underused assets in a seller's marketing toolkit. Using them deliberately is the kind of marginal advantage that makes a measurable difference.

Talk to our team about how to maximise your viewing strategy



Summer solstice property searches: Why June marks the peak buyer browsing period

Property portals do not experience uniform traffic throughout the year. The data behind the biggest search platforms reveals a consistent seasonal pattern: browsing spikes sharply around the Christmas and New Year period, rises again through the spring, and reaches one of its most sustained peaks in June. The summer solstice, sitting at the centre of that peak, falls in a window when more people are actively engaging with property than at almost any other point in the year. Understanding why that happens, and what it means in practice, is useful for anyone with a stake in the market.

Why June generates such high search volumes
Several distinct buyer motivations converge in June and each of them generates search activity. Family buyers who need to move before the September school term are in the most urgent phase of their search. They have typically been looking since the spring, have a clear picture of what they need, and are now at the point of viewing and deciding. Their searches are purposeful, high-frequency, and concentrated in specific areas.

Alongside them are buyers who have been watching the market through the first half of the year and are ready to commit. The combination of improving weather, long days, and the social momentum of summer creates a psychological readiness to act that the grey months of January and February do not. Browsing a property portal after a long, warm June evening feels materially different from the same activity on a dark February night, and that difference in mood is reflected in engagement metrics.

Renters whose tenancy agreements commonly fall on anniversary dates that cluster in the summer are also active in June, assessing whether this is the year they make the step into ownership rather than renewing again. The longer days and generally positive sentiment of early summer make the decision feel more achievable.

What the data shows about June browsing behaviour
Rightmove has consistently reported that June is among the busiest months of the year for site traffic, with the period around the summer solstice producing some of the highest browsing figures recorded. Zoopla's annual data confirms the same pattern, showing that search volume in June routinely exceeds the monthly average by a meaningful margin. Crucially, June browsing is not purely aspirational. The conversion rate from search to viewing request and from viewing to offer is strong in June precisely because the buyers generating that activity have been in the market long enough to know what they want and are now in decision mode.

This is the distinction that matters most commercially. A Boxing Day browser is often someone with a vague intention to move at some unspecified point in the year ahead. A June browser is frequently someone who has been refining their search criteria for months, has a mortgage in principle, and is looking at your property as a genuine candidate rather than a passing consideration.

What it means for sellers
For sellers, the June browsing peak is the market coming to them in concentrated form. A property that is listed in the run-up to the solstice, or that has been on the market since the spring and is still available, sits in front of the highest volume of genuinely motivated browsers of the year. The properties that convert that traffic into viewings and offers are those with strong photography, accurate pricing, and clear, compelling descriptions.

Sellers who have been on the market for several weeks without achieving the traction they expected should treat June as a reset moment. Refreshed photography that captures the property in the best summer light, a pricing review against recent comparable sales, and a renewed focus on maximising viewing availability in the long evenings can all shift the dynamic meaningfully at a point in the year when the audience is at its largest.

What it means for buyers
For buyers, June's browsing peak is accompanied by one of the year's strongest tranches of new listings. Sellers who have been preparing through spring arrive on the market in May and June, which means the stock available for buyers to browse is at or near its annual high. The combination of more properties to consider and more time in the day to view them makes June one of the most genuinely productive months to be searching.

The practical implication is not to slow down the search in the assumption that summer will bring a quieter, easier market. June is busy because motivation is high on both sides. The buyers who prepare properly, hold a mortgage in principle, and are ready to act decisively when they find the right property are the ones who move in June. Those who are still getting organised are the ones who find the property they want already under offer.

The solstice as a natural deadline
There is a softer but real phenomenon worth acknowledging: the summer solstice functions as an informal psychological deadline for buyers and sellers who want to complete before the end of summer. Once the longest day passes, the implicit sense that the window is shortening begins to influence decisions. Sellers become marginally more open to negotiation on timing and sometimes on price. Buyers feel the pressure of the school year approaching. That convergence of motivations, playing out against the backdrop of the highest browsing volumes of the year, is what makes the period around 21 June one of the most commercially significant in the entire property calendar.

Buying or selling this summer? Talk to our team today



EPC ratings: Why C-rated homes sell faster in competitive markets

For most of the past decade, the EPC rating on a property listing was something buyers glanced at briefly before moving on to the photographs and the floor plan. That behaviour has changed. With energy costs remaining 44% above pre-crisis levels and buyers paying greater attention to the total monthly cost of ownership rather than just the mortgage payment, the energy performance of a property has entered the mainstream of purchasing decisions in a way it has not before. In a market where buyers have the widest choice in approximately eight years, that shift has a direct and measurable impact on which properties move quickly and which ones sit.

What the evidence shows
Rightmove research has consistently shown that properties with strong EPC ratings spend less time on the market than equivalent homes with lower ratings. An analysis of selling times by EPC band found that Band A and B properties sell on average 10 to 15 days faster than Band D and E equivalents in comparable locations and price brackets. Zoopla's portal data shows that EPC rating filters are among the most commonly applied search criteria by active buyers in 2026, a significant change from pre-2022 behaviour when energy filters were among the least used.

The practical reason for this is straightforward. A buyer comparing two otherwise similar properties, one rated Band C and one rated Band E, is comparing not just the purchase price but the likely monthly cost of occupying each home. At current energy prices, the annual running cost difference between a Band C and a Band E property of equivalent size can range from £500 to over £1,500. Spread across a five-year mortgage period, that gap represents a meaningful financial difference that informed buyers are increasingly unwilling to ignore.

Why the competitive market amplifies this effect
The influence of EPC ratings on buyer decision-making is most pronounced in a market characterised by elevated choice, precisely the conditions of summer 2026. When buyers have limited options, they are more willing to accept a property that falls short of their criteria in some respects, including energy efficiency, because the alternative is continuing to search in a thin market. When buyers have more homes to choose from than in eight years, their tolerance for compromise diminishes. A Band D or E rated property competing against Band C alternatives in the same street or postcode is at a structural disadvantage that no amount of staging or competitive pricing can fully offset.

This effect is also visible in price achieved relative to asking price. Analysis from Nationwide and YouGov found that buyers are willing to pay a premium of up to 5% for homes at the stronger end of the EPC scale compared to lower-rated equivalents. Conversely, properties rated D or below are increasingly subject to buyer attempts to negotiate a discount that reflects the anticipated cost of improvement works, even where those works are not strictly necessary to meet current letting or ownership requirements.

What sellers can do about it
For sellers whose properties are currently rated Band D or below, the question is whether targeted improvements before listing would improve selling speed and achieved price sufficiently to justify the investment. The answer depends on what the rating-limiting factors are and how cost-effectively they can be addressed.

In many properties, a Band D rating reflects one or two specific deficiencies rather than a wholesale energy performance problem. An ageing boiler that could be replaced for £2,000 to £3,000, a loft that could be insulated for a modest cost, or single-glazed windows in a secondary room all represent targeted improvements that can move a property from Band D to Band C at a cost well below what a buyer might try to negotiate off the asking price. A post-improvement EPC, commissioned after works are complete and before the property is listed, reflects the improved rating and supports the asking price with verifiable evidence.

For sellers who are not in a position to carry out improvements before listing, transparency is the most effective alternative strategy. Providing buyers with a clear indication of what works would be required to improve the rating, alongside realistic cost estimates, demonstrates honesty and removes the uncertainty that tends to prompt aggressive negotiating. A buyer who knows a boiler replacement costs £2,500 is less likely to demand a £10,000 reduction than one who is left to estimate the cost themselves.

The longer-term picture
The 2030 EPC Band C requirement for rental properties is already influencing buyer calculations. Buyers purchasing a property as a future investment or as a home they may eventually let need to understand what they are buying into. A Band E property purchased today carries a compliance cost that will need to be addressed within four years, and buyers are factoring this into their offers with increasing frequency. For sellers, this is a further argument for addressing the rating before listing rather than leaving the liability in the hands of the buyer's surveyor and solicitor to negotiate back.

Band C properties sell faster, achieve stronger prices relative to asking, and attract a wider pool of buyers in competitive market conditions. In a market defined by choice, that advantage is real and growing.

Ready to present your home at its best? Talk to our team today