22 Years To Save For A Deposit
- ryanphillips1
- Apr 28, 2016
- 1 min read

The rapid rise in house prices compared to the slow increase in incomes means potential buyers take longer to save for a deposit, therefore boosting the rental marketaccording to research by the Resolution Foundation.
It found that the average low to middle income (LMI) household would take 22 years to save the typical deposit paid on a first-time buyer home today.
Twenty years ago the average household with two incomes and one child spent 17% of their income on housing. By 2015 this had risen to 21%, equivalent to £1,500 or a rise of 10p in basic rate income tax.
LMI ownership has dropped from 73% in 2000 to 55% in 2014, while higher income ownership fell from 88% to 76%. Benefit-reliant households saw a drop in home ownership levels from 25% to 20%.
Lindsay Judge, senior policy analyst at the Resolution Foundation, said: “Spiralling house prices and stagnating wage growth created a growing wedge between housing costs and incomes, which peaked on the eve of the crash.
“Falling housing costs helped soften the living standards squeeze for many households during the downturn. But these costs are rising again and risk holding back the living standards recovery.”
In 1999, the average first-time buyer property cost 3.9 times the average LMI household income. This went up to 7.1 times in 2007. It then fell but is predicted to rise to 6.7 times by 2020, 83% higher than in 1983.
The report says the Help to Buy scheme “appears to be having relatively little bearing on LMI opportunities,” instead “providing a welcome leg-up for those who would eventually get on to the housing ladder anyway”.
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