Pretty UK village where house prices are being slashed by £100k after second homes nightmare

Staff
By Staff

A homeowner is struggling to sell her waterside cottage even after slashing the price by a staggering £100,000, as locals argue their village has become a “ghost town”.

Kayaks and boats across the shore at low tide in Golant in Spring
Some house prices are being slashed in the pretty village(Image: Lisa Letcher / Cornwall Live)

Locals in a charming Cornish village are being forced to slash their property prices due to a tax clampdown on second homes. The demand for properties in the area has plummeted following the move, which is aimed at easing the county’s housing crisis.

A homeowner in Golant is struggling to sell her waterside cottage even after chopping off a whopping £100,000 from the price, although reaction to this has been mixed, with strong feelings against second homes. The village is near Fowey, where celebs like Gordon Ramsay and Dawn French have previously owned properties.

Debbie Pugh-Jones, 69, has dropped the asking price of her home three times in 10 months but hasn’t found a buyer yet. Properties around Golant fetched up to £425,000 during the Covid-19 pandemic.

With this in mind, Debbie put her home on the market for £400,000 last August, only to realise that her two-bedroom house was now priced similarly to a small flat in a rundown part of some cities.

She believes potential buyers have been put off by the doubled stamp duty for second homes and also blames Cornwall Council’s decision to double tax rates on them. This move is expected to rake in £24 million this year, reports Cornwall Live.

Residents in Cornwall and other popular tourist hotspots claim they can no longer afford properties in their hometowns as wealthy outsiders purchase them up. Yet, these new proprietors only use the homes when they desire a getaway from urban living.

Cornwall grandmother stuck far away from family due to stamp duty
Debbie is struggling to sell her home(Image: Debbie Pugh-Jones / SWNS)

Conversely, local business contend that the income from second homeowners is crucial. They also depend heavily on visitor trade during the busy summer period.

Debbie voiced her exasperation, stating: “When you come down that much in price you would expect to get a viewing but I’ve had three in nearly a year. Nobody at all looked around between November and April.”

She also emphasised the effect of higher council tax on the local area: “Double council tax won’t affect the very wealthy but it will affect the middle class people wanting to buy a second home.

“The community is at risk of changing because some of the second home buyers in this village aren’t happy to be paying double council tax.”

Debbie noted the population changes in her village: “Around half of the houses in this village are second homes and the rest are retired people, there are very few people working in this village. It’s making them struggle but even if they wanted to sell they wouldn’t be able to.”

She further commented on the lack of local employment and amenities: “People living here used to work in farms and on the boats but all those industries are gone and the village doesn’t have a school, it’s not near a bus route and it doesn’t have any amenities. I’m not depriving a first time buyer of a place to live because it’s not the sort of house that would suit them.”

Reflecting on her own experience, she added: “It had always been my dream to retire to the coast. It was the view that attracted me, the river view is nicer than the sea view because it is always changing. I paid a premium for it because I paid for the views but straight away I fell in love with it.”

Following the purchase of her Cornwall property for £240,000 in 2013, Debbie relocated to Bath after her mother died last year, having invested £30,000 in improvements whilst living there.

Nick Budd, who runs The Fisherman’s Arms local pub, said second homes are simply part of everyday life in Golant. He added: “It’s a hard one because not all second home owners are the same. You have the holiday lets which are great for us, because when people come on holiday they want to eat out and drink in the pub.

Nick Budd, 28, is the landlord of the Fisherman's Arms in Golant. He moved to Cornwall from Surrey five year's ago to join his parents who were already living in the village.
Pub landlord Nick Budd(Image: Lisa Letcher / Cornwall Live)

“Then you have the lock up and leave its – and they are the ones that kill us. The overwhelming outcome of property price rises is young people cannot afford to buy a house in the village and that situation needs addressing.”

A report revealed that almost 9,500 properties in Cornwall were used as second homes last year. But following the launch of the “tourist tax” on April 1, demand for such properties has plummeted dramatically.

Bradley Start, from Start and Co estate agents in Newquay, said: “They’ve received these demands for twice as much council tax and that’s prompted a lot of people to think about selling.”

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