The UK housing market has always been sensitive to uncertainty.
But what matters now is not just the uncertainty itself, it’s how quickly it has translated into something buyers can actually feel.
Money has become more expensive.
The conflict in the Middle East began on 28 February. Within days, global markets reacted. Funding costs shifted and lenders began nudging mortgage rates upwards in response.
This is a fact. Buyers may not fully appreciate the nuances of geopolitics, but they understand a hit to their bank accounts when they see one.
Against that backdrop, HMRC’s latest figures show 102,410 residential transactions in February, a 6% annual fall. But February is a lagging indicator. Most of those deals were agreed before the current volatility took hold.
In many ways, this is the last clean read of the market before the new reality sets in.
Andrew Lloyd of Search Acumen is right to warn of an “ominous tone”. But the more immediate issue is not what has happened, it’s what happens next.
Because this time, uncertainty isn’t arriving on its own. It’s arriving alongside higher borrowing costs.
Headlines focus on the geopolitics
That combination matters.
In uncertain markets, buyers don’t disappear, they hesitate. Add rising mortgage rates into the mix, and hesitation hardens into delay. Deals stretch. Chains break. Margins for error evaporate.
So what can agents do about it?
First, price with discipline. In a rising-rate environment, yesterday’s pricing logic becomes tomorrow’s fall-through.
Second, control the narrative. Buyers are already seeing headlines about rates increasing. Address it upfront. Explain what it means and, just as importantly, what it doesn’t.
Third, qualify harder than usual. When affordability tightens, the gap between “interested” and “proceedable” becomes wider.
And finally, protect the chain. In volatile conditions, progression becomes just as important as instruction.
Because while the headlines focus on the geopolitics, the housing market will respond to something much simpler.
Certainty of cost.
If buyers believe rates will keep rising, they pause.
If they believe stability is returning, they get restless.
Which is why the coming weeks matter.
February’s data shows a market already under gentle pressure. March and April will reveal how it reacts when that pressure becomes more intensive and more expensive.
For now, the priority is not prediction, it’s control.
Because in markets like this, the agents who succeed are not the ones who wait for certainty, they’re the ones who create just enough stability to keep deals moving.
