Equity Release Timing

Housing Market Subdued in 2026: Is Now the Right Time to Release Equity?

The RICS UK Residential Market Survey for April 2026 reported a headline house price balance of -34%, down from -25% in March — indicating that more surveyors are seeing price falls than rises for the second consecutive month. For homeowners considering equity release, this prompts a natural question: should you act now while values are still elevated relative to the long-term average, or wait for prices to recover? There is no single right answer. Here is an honest look at both sides.

Should I release equity now or wait 2026 house prices subdued RICS

What the April 2026 RICS data actually says

The RICS monthly survey is one of the most closely watched indicators of UK housing market conditions. The headline "price balance" measures the net percentage of surveyors reporting price rises minus those reporting price falls. A reading of -34% in April 2026 means that significantly more surveyors are seeing prices ease than rise.

It is important to understand what this does — and does not — mean. A negative price balance does not mean prices are collapsing. It means the direction of travel in surveyors' individual markets is more often downward than upward. Actual price falls, when they occur, have been modest: UK average house prices remain in the £285,000 to £295,000 range, down from a peak of around £310,000 in 2022 but well above pre-pandemic levels.

RICS also noted that sales agreed and buyer enquiries balances were negative in April 2026, suggesting the market is likely to remain subdued through the summer. This is a market that is soft, not distressed.

The case for acting now on equity release

There are genuine arguments for proceeding with equity release in the current market, depending on your circumstances:

The case for waiting

For homeowners whose need is not urgent, there are also reasonable arguments for patience:

How equity release valuations work

One important point to understand: equity release is not based on a price you choose or a peak value. It is based on an independent valuation carried out by a RICS-qualified surveyor at the time of application. The surveyor assesses current market value — which in today's market will reflect the subdued conditions visible in the RICS data.

This means you cannot "lock in" a higher valuation from a year ago. Equally, if you wait and the market recovers, a future application will reflect that higher valuation. The independent valuation process is designed to be fair and transparent — and it is one of the FCA-regulated requirements that protects consumers.

The protection that applies regardless of timing

Whether you proceed now or in 12 months, the no-negative-equity guarantee applies to all Equity Release Council member products. You will never owe more than your home sells for, regardless of future market conditions. This protection means that even if property values fall further after you take a plan, you are not exposed to a debt that exceeds your home's value.

Combined with the FCA requirement for independent, qualified advice, this consumer protection framework means equity release decisions are made with full information — and with contractual safeguards that did not exist in earlier decades of the market.

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