Scottish house prices are now forecast by a major estate agent to rise this year at double the rate previously predicted.

Upmarket agent Rettie has hiked its central projection of growth in house prices north of the Border this year from 1.5% to 3%, based on average property values, on the back of the recent cut in benchmark UK interest rates.

However, it declared the overall housing market in Scotland remains “tepid”.

And it has reduced its prediction of growth in house prices in 2025 from 4% to 3%, based on UK economic growth forecasts for next year.


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Rettie flagged a “greater sense of stability” in the housing market, with UK base rates having been cut by a quarter-point in August and then held at 5% last month.

The estate agent expects a gradual increase in activity in the Scottish housing market, back towards the longer-term trend of around 100,000 sales per year, “as the economic recovery becomes more established”.

Rettie meanwhile expressed “concerns that the proposals by the Scottish Government to deal with rent pressures contained in the Housing Bill that is currently making its way through the Scottish Parliament, which would see a strict rent control regime managed by local authorities, could have the unintended consequence of further squeezing supply and adding to Scotland’s housing crisis”.


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John Boyle, head of research at Rettie, declared: “The rental market remains buoyant in terms of demand but there are real concerns about the direction of government legislation.”

He added: “Unfortunately, there has been very minimal levels of BTR (build-to-rent) investment in Scotland since the rent freeze was put in place even though it has now been lifted. The possibility of the introduction of another stringent system of rent controls is deterring pension funds from investing in Scotland’s housing.”

Rettie said it was raising its forecast of growth in Scottish house prices this year “due to the recent reduction in the UK interest rate”.

Mr Boyle said: “With the Bank of England deciding to keep interest rates at 5%, following the quarter-point reduction in August, there is a greater sense of stability in the market and market rate cuts are reducing costs for consumers. However, Scotland’s housing market performance is still best described as tepid, a lukewarm showing as the market continues to adjust to higher interest and mortgage rates that kicked in during autumn 2022.”

Rettie said: “While mortgage rates are now reducing, they are expected to remain above historic levels for some time, meaning the market will still face a headwind. As the wider economy improves more than many anticipated in 2024, forecasts from the Bank of England indicate that the rate of economic growth may slow again next year. Along these lines, Rettie has lowered its house price forecast for 2025 from +4% to +3%.”

Mr Boyle said: “In subsequent years, we think that growth will move back closer to a longer-term trend of around a 4% annual increase if the economy recovers as anticipated.”

Rettie said: “The level of residential property transactions was around 93,000 in 2023, with Rettie forecasting a modest increase this year and a gradual movement towards a longer-term trend of around 100,000 sales per year as the economic recovery becomes more established. However, this will be far from the market peak in 2007, when Scotland achieved over 150,000 house sales.”

The estate agent declared that, in the Scottish rental market, “the number of new listings continues to fall, highlighting the demand-supply imbalance”. It added: “While rent rises are cooling in Scotland’s main cities in 2024, this is on the back of substantial double-digit [percentage] rises stemming from when the rent freeze was first announced two years ago.”

Figures published yesterday by building society Nationwide showed a 0.7% month on month rise in UK house prices in September on a seasonally adjusted basis. This resulted in the annual rate of house price growth rising from 2.4% in August to 3.2% in September, the fastest pace since November 2022.