The UK housing market may be presenting a broadly stable picture as it moves through the early weeks of 2026, but a closer look at the data tells a more complicated story, with approximately 24% of property sales failing to reach completion and leaving buyers and sellers facing significant disruption.
Analysis published by Quick Move Now has examined what lies beneath the raw figures, focusing specifically on identifying the individual triggers that are causing transactions to break down. Although TwentyCi’s latest Property and Homemover Report records a year-on-year reduction in fall-through volumes of 12.1% nationally, the fundamental reasons behind the sales that do fall apart remain a substantial and unresolved problem for those trying to move home across the UK.
Reasons behind the Q1 2026 house sale fall throughs The companies research into failed transactions in the first quarter of 2026 reveals five primary reasons why house sales fail to complete:
- Survey issues (37.5%): The leading cause of collapse, with physical issues found during property inspections leading to a breakdown in negotiations.
- Change of heart (31.25%): Nearly a third of failed sales were attributed to buyers simply changing their minds, often linked to market jitters and future uncertainties.
- Lending and chains (25% combined): Chain breaks and lending issues each accounted for 12.5% of failures. Despite lenders stretching criteria to support the market, mortgage volatility remains a factor in 1 in 8 failed deals.
- Legal red tape (6.25%): Complexities during the conveyancing process accounted for the remainder of the losses.
The data shows that timing is critical. According to the TwentyCi report, 38% of fall-throughs occur within the first four weeks of a sale being agreed.
“While it is encouraging to see the national fall through rate drop slightly from 24.0% to 23.7%, the human cost of these failed sales is immense,” says Danny Luke, Chief Executive Officer at Quick Move Now. “In particular, the spike in Inner London, where fall-through rates surged by nearly 10% this quarter, suggests that high-value transactions are under increased pressure from policy changes such as the mansion tax.”
“To mitigate the 37.5% risk associated with surveys, we recommend that sellers address known maintenance issues before listing. Furthermore, with 1 in 3 buyers changing their minds, securing a committed buyer is more vital than ever in a market where the average time to exchange has now risen to 134 days.”




