Agents could be losing more than £80m a month in property ‘fall throughs’

With government data showing that around a third of property transactions fall-through before completion, agents could be collectively losing over £80m in commission fees each month, according to analysis by Gazeal.

The latest data from HM Land Registry figures show that there were 105,630 completed transactions in October. Based on Nationwide’s national average house price of £229,721 and an average commission fee of 1%, agents’ total monthly earnings are in excess of approximately £242m.

Recent research from NAEA Propertymark found that the average estate agency branch completed 14 transactions in September. Based on this figure, the average estate agency branch could be losing in excess of £10,000 per month due to fall-throughs, the study suggests.

The number of potential property transactions has risen sharply in recent months due to the stamp duty holiday, while a rise in demand which could continue into the New Year.

According to Zoopla forecasts, an additional 100,000 sales are expected in the first quarter of 2021 as high transaction volumes spill over from the end of 2020. This could result in an additional 33,000 fall-throughs and lost commission for the industry to the tune of approximately £75m, according to Bryan Mansell, co-founder of Gazeal.

He said: “Although overall transaction numbers are up due to the stamp duty cut, many will have fallen through in recent months for a variety of reasons and many more will do as we move into 2021.

“This results in agents doing hours of work without getting paid.”

Weak consumer confidence and a huge backlog of outstanding transactions is putting pressure on longer chains, according to Mansell.

He continued: “For a housing transaction to go through, a range of components need to come together seamlessly.

“This does not always happen, so agents have to face the reality that each branch risks losing thousands of pounds in commission each month due to fall-throughs.”

Mansell is urging agents to consider taking out “reservation agreements” to help protect their own income stream.

He added: “A reservation agreement is a fair and balanced way of protecting transactions in which no-one is punished if no-one is to blame for a transaction falling through. Furthermore, sellers are encouraged to use reservation agreements as recommended in the government’s How to Sell Guide.”

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4 Comments

  1. Woodentop

    Can someone tell me the average fall through rate every year for the past decade? Any different!

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    1. Robert_May

      If you talk to the conveyancers 20-30% of agreed sales fall through.  Of those  about half are because of lack of funds.  Change of mind and frustration at how long the process can drag on is most of the other reasons given.  1 or 2 % are down to title issues.

       

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      1. Woodentop

        My point Robert. Today is no different to historical fall through rates for decades. Some agent are better than others. A few corporates used to drop to 40% plus once in a while and the extra percentage was no sale was there in the first place. Seem to recall a certain on-line company were accused of around 50% mark when they claimed 10%?

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        1. Robert_May

          Today is a bit different; if you look at those numbers £80m/ £10,000 means there are suddenly only 8,000 branches!

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