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What First-Time Buyers Look For in Properties: A Seller’s Guide

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First-time buyers account for a just over a third of UK property purchases made with a mortgage in 2025, according to UK Finance data. They are a substantial and motivated segment of the buyer pool, typically highly prepared, often pre-approved for a mortgage, and strongly incentivised to complete once they find the right home. For sellers whose property sits in a price bracket or location likely to attract first-time buyers, understanding what this group values most is practical and commercially useful information.

Condition and move-in readiness carry significant weight

First-time buyers are managing a significant financial commitment, often at the limits of what they can comfortably afford. The deposit, legal fees, stamp duty where applicable, and moving costs have consumed a large proportion of their available savings. Against that backdrop, the prospect of a property that requires immediate significant expenditure on a new boiler, a rewire, or a new roof is a genuine deterrent, not just a negotiating point.

Properties that are well maintained and genuinely move-in ready often appeal most strongly to this buyer group. This does not mean a home needs to be recently renovated or decorated to current trends. It means that the fundamental systems, heating, electrics, plumbing, and structure, are in sound working order and can be evidenced. A valid boiler service record, a current Electrical Installation Condition Report, and the absence of obvious damp or structural concerns remove the anxieties that first-time buyers, without the experience of previous purchases to draw on, tend to feel most acutely.

Outside space continues to be a priority

Private outdoor space, even in modest form, has ranked consistently among the most valued features across all buyer groups since 2020, and first-time buyers are no exception. A garden, courtyard, or private terrace, particularly in properties that might otherwise feel compact, adds meaningful appeal.

Where a property has outdoor space, presenting it at its best, lawns cut, surfaces clean, and any furniture or planting in good order, is as important as the interior presentation. First-time buyers buying a flat without outdoor access will often look for proximity to parks or communal green space as a practical substitute.

Parking and practicality matter more than aesthetics

First-time buyers tend to be pragmatic in their priorities. Off-street parking, where available, is consistently cited as a significant positive, particularly outside city centres where car ownership is higher. Good storage, a separate utility area, and practical kitchen layouts are valued more reliably than statement design features that appeal to a narrower taste.

Properties that have been decorated in neutral, broadly appealing tones often photograph better, view better, and can help buyers to picture themselves in the space more easily than those with highly personalised interiors. The goal is not to strip the property of character but to present it in a way that a wide range of buyers, including those with limited renovation budgets or inclination, can immediately see themselves living in.

Local amenities and transport links are key decision drivers

First-time buyers tend to research their target areas extensively before viewing. Proximity to public transport, commute times to employment centres, local shops, and the quality of nearby schools all feature in that research, and many buyers have already made a shortlist of acceptable areas before they contact an agent. The listing description and any supporting materials should speak clearly to these factors rather than leaving buyers to work them out independently.

Where a property benefits from recently improved transport links, new local amenities, or proximity to a good school catchment, these are worth communicating explicitly. First-time buyers in unfamiliar areas will not always know what is within walking distance or what has changed locally in the past year or two.

Transparency builds confidence

First-time buyers are completing a process they have never navigated before, and uncertainty is one of the most consistent sources of hesitation at the offer stage. Sellers who can provide a clear picture of the property’s condition upfront, through a pre-sale survey, readily available certificates, or simply clear and honest answers to questions raised at viewing, build the kind of buyer confidence that makes offers more likely to proceed without delay.

Transparency about any known issues, disclosed accurately and with context, is consistently more effective than leaving buyers to discover problems through their own survey and negotiate reactively. A buyer who feels informed and well-treated may be more confident when making decisions.

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Date Posted

June 26, 2026

Article Category

Author

Fiona Clougher

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