The barriers preventing would-be homebuyers from achieving their aspiration remain financial, according to the Building Societies Association’s latest Property Tracker survey, conducted in January 2026.
64% named raising a deposit as an obstacle, while 50% said affording monthly mortgage repayments, and 45% said access to a large enough mortgage, suggesting that attitudes around home ownership remain aspirational, with finance being the main thing keeping would-be FTBs from the homebuying journey.
With the main obstacles tightly clustered around mortgage affordability and availability, changes to lenders’ products and policies could have the potential to unlock significant first-time buyer activity.
However, while first-time buyers are waiting to act, pressures on older age groups may restrict movement across the wider housing market. The research highlights that barriers facing older adults may limit the number of properties coming up for sale, and in turn slow down activity for would-be buyers further down the chain.
A third (33%) of people aged 55 and over say concerns about job security is an obstacle to buying a home, while three in ten (30%) in this age group cite stamp duty costs as a barrier. Both pressures have intensified over the past year, up from around a quarter of over 55’s in January 2025 (25% concerned about job security; 24% about Stamp Duty costs). Together, these pressures risk discouraging older homeowners from moving, reducing the supply of homes coming on to the market.
Paul Broadhead, head of mortgage and housing policy at the Building Societies Association, said: "We are starting to see more encouraging signs for first-time buyers. The aspiration to own a home is clearly strong, with potential buyers sensibly waiting for the right moment. As lenders continue to innovate and affordability pressures begin to ease, we are seeing how flexible mortgage products are turning that pent-up demand into homeownership.
"But unless the barriers which are starting to impact older buyers, including lack of job security and concerns about stamp duty costs, are addressed, movement across the wider housing market is likely to remain constrained."


