
Gazumping & Gazundering Are Back: How to Protect Yourself in a Cutthroat Market
As the UK housing market experiences renewed turbulence, two old foes have re-emerged with a vengeance: gazumping and gazundering. Recent Google Trends data shows a dramatic 1,500% increase in searches for these terms, highlighting growing buyer and seller anxiety. But what exactly do they mean — and how can you avoid falling victim?
🔍 What Is Gazumping?
Gazumping occurs when a seller accepts an offer on a property but later accepts a higher one from another buyer before contracts are exchanged.
📌 Example: You offer £350,000, it’s accepted — but two weeks later, the seller takes a £365,000 offer instead.
💸 What Is Gazundering?
Gazundering is the reverse: a buyer lowers their offer just before the exchange of contracts, often pressuring sellers to accept a lower price to avoid a collapsed chain.
📌 Example: Your buyer drops their offer by £10,000 the day before exchange, claiming “new survey concerns.”
⚠️ Why These Tactics Are Trending
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Low housing stock: More buyers competing for fewer homes.
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Market uncertainty: Some sellers panic, others hold out for better offers.
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Long chains: Delays increase the chances of buyers or sellers changing terms.
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Lack of legal binding: In England and Wales, offers aren’t legally binding until exchange.
🛡️ How to Protect Yourself
For Buyers:
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Ask for the property to be taken off the market immediately after your offer is accepted.
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Get everything in writing, including timelines and agreed terms.
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Move fast with surveys and conveyancing to minimise the window for gazumping.
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Consider a lock-in agreement to legally bind the seller.
For Sellers:
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Pre-qualify your buyer – ensure they have a mortgage in principle and a buyer behind them (if part of a chain).
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Communicate regularly to maintain trust.
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Set a deadline for exchange, reducing the window for gazundering.
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Refuse late negotiations unless there's valid justification (e.g. structural issues).
⚖️ Should the Law Change?
Scotland already avoids much of this with binding agreements earlier in the process. Campaigns in England and Wales are pushing for similar legal reforms, including:
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Reservation agreements
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Financial penalties for last-minute pull-outs