3 Feb 2009

As sterling struggles, Britons are selling their places abroad to buy cheaply at home in the UK

Zoe Dare Hall for the Daily Mail reports that prices of holiday homes across the Continent have been plummeting as the tap of British buyers was abruptly switched off last autumn.

New- build properties marketed purely for the British and Irish markets are the worst hit, but anyone owning a holiday home that might appeal to local buyers will clean up given the collapse of sterling against the euro .

Foreign exchange specialist Caxton FX reports an 89 per cent increase in the number of British clients repatriating funds in the past three months of last year - mainly from people selling Spanish holiday homes. People are discounting their properties by 20- 25 per cent, as they can recoup the difference when they transfer their funds back to the UK. The falling pound has presented an excellent opportunity for buyers repatriating money.There are also a high number of transactions from British holiday home- owners in France, where property prices have remained more stable than elsewhere in Europe.The Algarve is also seeing high numbers of British homeowners willing to take a hit on their asking price if they are bringing their euro profits home.