House sales remained slightly higher than pre-pandemic levels in November, according to HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) figures.
Across the UK, an estimated 107,190 house sales took place in November, which was 13 per cent higher than November 2021.
HMRC said year-on-year comparisons should be treated with caution.
A stamp duty holiday which ended in autumn 2021 caused house sales to bunch up earlier in that year, as buyers rushed to make the most of stamp duty savings.
The impacts from the stamp duty holiday may have had an effect on November 2021 transactions.
Fixed-rate mortgages continue to move gently downwards
HMRC’s report said house sales “have been stable in recent months, and remain similar but slightly elevated above pre-coronavirus levels”.
Mark Harris, chief executive of mortgage broker SPF Private Clients, said: “Transaction numbers are holding up, particularly as we would expect things to start to slow down as we approach Christmas.
“Buyers with good mortgage offers are keen to complete before they expire, while others have to move for whatever reason, even if the market is more difficult than it has been.
“Even though the Bank of England hiked the base rate by half a point as expected last week, fixed-rate mortgages continue to move gently downwards, with five-year fixes breaching the 4.5 per cent barrier and expected to go below four per cent in the new year as the cost of funds falls, servicing pressure subsides and lenders attempt to originate new business.
“For some borrowers, a base-rate tracker with no early repayment charges is a better alternative until fixed-rate pricing comes down further.”
There has been a significant downward trend in market appraisals being carried out
Matthew Thompson, head of sales at estate agent Chestertons, said: “Compared to November 2021, our branches experienced a 23 per cent uplift in the number of properties being sold. However, there has been a significant downward trend in market appraisals being carried out.
“This suggests that, although buyer sentiment is fairly strong, some sellers are still holding off due to economic uncertainty.”
Charlotte Nixon, a mortgage expert at wealth managers Quilter, said: “While property transactions are yet to fall, they are certainly beginning to slow.
“A fall in house prices is widely anticipated for next year — Nationwide just yesterday shared its prediction that house prices could lower by five per cent in 2023 — and slowing property transactions is likely the first sign that this could materialise as reduced demand goes hand-in-hand with reduced prices.
“The Bank of England has now hiked its base rate to 3.5 per cent, which will have a knock-on effect on mortgage rates – primarily for those on variable rate mortgages.
“As such, more people may opt to hold off on purchasing a home as the monthly costs rise and become that much more unaffordable, which will only further reduce demand.”
Ross Boyd, founder of mortgage comparison platform Dashly.com said: “A lot will depend on the resilience of the jobs market and how stubborn inflation proves, as the cost-of-living crisis, coupled with higher borrowing rates, is hitting confidence for six.”