The UK’s largest property auctioneer says that there is now clear evidence of the impact the pandemic has had on the auction market - and it’s a dramatic shift in its website demographic.
Auction House’s figures indicate that compared to the whole of pre-Covid 2019, sales money raised in 2021 jumped by over a third from £439.7m to over £600m.
Meanwhile, analysis shows that not only does the Auction House website have more users (from 1.6m in 2019 to 2.4m now), a greater proportion of younger people are accessing the group’s services online.
Whilst use by the 55-64 year old age group has dropped by 19 per cent, there has been a 42 per cent increase in the number of 25-34 year olds and a huge 441 per cent spike in the amount of 18-24 year olds getting involved.
Auction House managing director Jeremy Prior says: “The pandemic has created a seismic shift in how the market operates, with impacts which will probably last forever. Lockdowns and social distancing mean that we have had to focus on a mixture of livestream and online auctions, which itself has turbo-boosted involvement by a younger demographic.”
He adds: “We were the only traditional, non-conditional UK property auctioneer to successfully sell over 3,600 lots last year – a nine per cent rise compared to 2020 and raising a total which was up year on year by over 35 per cent - an increase of £158.8m.
“This is likely to attract more buyers to the market – especially from a younger demographic who will reach out to auction because they want the transparency and certainty of the process and don’t want to be stuck in a chain, as is still regularly happening in the world of private treaty sales.
“Even as restrictions lift in the coming months, we think that now people have experienced the ease and comfort of buying property in a livestream or online auction, they will want to continue doing so from the comfort of the home or place of work.”