UK housing wealth passes £7 trillion for first time
Half of it is owned by people who don't have mortgages
Net UK housing wealth exceeded £7 trillion for the first time last year.
That's according to calculations from estate agent, Savills.
The company says the total value of UK homes reached £8.68 trillion at the end of 2022.
With outstanding mortgage debt standing at £1.66 trillion, according to Bank of England records, Savills calculated that net housing wealth stood at more than £7 trillion.
Of this, nearly half - £3.34 trillion - was held by mortgage-free homeowners, the estate agent said.
Head of residential research at Savills, Lucian Cook. said: "The growth in house prices over the past three years has added considerably to the paper wealth of homeowners, driven in no small part by the well-documented 'race for space' over the period."
But he added: "Recent interest rate rises are going to continue to put first-time buyer and second stepper budgets under pressure in 2023 and 2024.
"Combined with the prospect of lower levels of housebuilding, we expect that 2022 will represent a high watermark for the value of the nation's housing stock for a few years."
Savills used a combination of sources for its calculations, including census, English Housing Survey and Land Registry data as well as Office for National Statistics (ONS) and Nationwide Building Society house price figures.