Annual fall in UK property transactions was four times higher during financial crisis than pandemic

UK property sales declined by 11% in 2020, provisional government data shows
Written By:
Tom Bill, Knight Frank
1 minute to read

UK property transactions fell 11% last year despite the impact of the pandemic and eight-week market shutdown, provisional government data shows.
It underlines the extent to which activity rebounded in the second half of last year, following a year-on-year decline of 57% in April during the first national lockdown.



Over the last quarter of 2020, sales volumes rose by 19% compared to 2019. To put the 11% annual decline in context, the eight-week shutdown was the equivalent of 15% of the whole year. The decrease also compares to a 43% decline in 2008 as the global financial crisis took hold.

“This puts the impact of Covid-19 on the property market into context,” said Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank. “Interest rates are lower than in 2008 and there has been a stamp duty incentive but that is only part of the story. After a subdued few years due to Brexit uncertainty and tax changes, an undercurrent of demand is propelling the market forwards and 2021 may also surprise on the upside.”

Read our latest UK monthly update for more analysis and information here.