As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Ruislip home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Crowthorne home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Stevenage home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Yateley home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Tadley home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Bicester home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we enter a new year, many local homeowners are facing a familiar question. Should they bring their Warfield home to market in January, or wait until the late spring?

As we close the chapter on 2025, Wokingham’s housing market has shown resilience and modest growth, even in the face of wider national uncertainty and economic headwinds. For homeowners, buyers and investors, the overall message as we head into 2026 is simple: stay calm and carry on. Let’s unpack why this makes sense and what the data tells us.

Strong communication is a landlord’s secret weapon. Clear, consistent contact helps prevent misunderstandings, builds trust, and turns small issues into easy fixes instead of major problems. Landlords who set expectations early and stay engaged enjoy smoother tenancies, fewer disputes, and longer-lasting, stress-free rental relationships.

Are you searching these phrases? “My home isn’t selling, and I don’t know why.” “I feel stuck in a sole agency agreement.” “How do I get things moving again with my property sale?” If yes, it means you’re in what we call the “agent gap”, when your agent’s actions no longer match your goals...

It’s been a few weeks (maybe longer), and the buzz has faded. Viewings are few and far between. Updates are sparse. And your agent’s enthusiasm? Nowhere to be seen.

If you’re Googling any of these right now: “Why am I getting viewings but no offers?” “What does buyer feedback really mean?” “Is my house overpriced or just badly marketed?” You’re not alone, and you’re right to ask. Because when buyers are walking in, nodding politely… and then vanishing or worse giving 'naff' offers, something’s misaligned.