Residential houses stand in this aerial view in Frome, U.K., on Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2020. U.K. house prices rose at their strongest annual pace since 2016 last month as Britons’ changing work patterns and a tax reduction on purchases fanned a resurgence. Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
Residential houses stand in this aerial view in Frome, U.K., on Wednesday, Oct. 7, 2020. U.K. house prices rose at their strongest annual pace since 2016 last month as Britons’ changing work patterns and a tax reduction on purchases fanned a resurgence. Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg

The surge in U.K. property prices will persist into next year as housing needs outweigh economic uncertainty, according to Rightmove.

It predicts asking prices will climb four per cent in 2021 as this year's unprecedented demand spills into the coming months. Currently there is a logjam of 650,000 properties in the market, with prices up 6.6 per cent compared to this time last year, the property website said.

The first quarter will be busy with people hurrying to buy homes to take advantage of a temporary tax cut on purchases that ends in March. Cheap mortgage rates will attract first-time buyers and fuel activity, Rightmove said.

"Pandemic-related uncertainties have been around for nearly a year, and Brexit uncertainties for far longer, and record activity month after month has proved that movers are willing and able to act on their

new or existing housing priorities," said Tim Bannister, a director at Rightmove.

Asking prices slipped 0.6 per cent in December from the previous month but were up 6.6 per cent from a year earlier, the fastest pace in four years, the website said. - Bloomberg