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UK real estate market outlook Q1 2026

UK real estate looks set to deliver healthy returns in 2026. Read more to find out why.

Authors
Head of UK Investment Research, Real Estate
Senior Real estate Investment Analyst
Graphic showing central business district type real estate

Duração: 9 Mins

Date: 26/01/2026

Key Highlights

    UK inflation rate and Bank of England policy rate forecasts

    UK economic outlook

    Activity

    As expected, economic growth slowed in the second half of 2025. While we await official data for the fourth quarter, both September and October saw monthly contractions of 0.1%, while the third quarter, as a whole, expanded by just 0.1%. Budget uncertainty and cyber-attack-related disruption to manufacturing production weighed on activity in November. However, the latest Purchasing Managers’ Indices suggest a modest pick-up in activity since then. The market seemed to appreciate the increased fiscal headroom delivered by the Budget, and government bond yields have settled into a fairly tight range. Despite the Office for Budget Responsibility downgrading UK gross domestic product growth, higher inflation and wage forecasts mean the overall tax take at the end of the forecast horizon is smaller than expected.

    Inflation

    Inflation moderated towards the end of the year, falling to 3.2% in the 12 months to November. Perhaps more notable is the moderation in the more relevant drivers of household inflation expectations, namely food price growth, which fell to 4.2%. Policymakers are also taking note of measures in the Budget that should reduce short-term inflationary pressure. At the same time, the labour market deteriorated; employment figures fell for nine out of the past 11 months through to November. Private sector pay growth also moderated.

    Policy

    At their latest meeting in December, the Bank of England cut interest rates from 4% to 3.75% in a five-to-four vote. Despite moderating inflationary pressures, several policymakers are suggesting a pause in the formal easing cycle at 3.5%. We still believe the terminal rate remains closer to 3%, given the deteriorating labour market and falling inflationary pressure. But we concede that a pause over the first half of 2026 may be necessary to drive a more neutral tone.

    UK economic outlook

    UK real estate market overview

    Real estate returned 7.7% over the 12 months to November [1] , representing a small decline over the second half of 2025. Despite this slowdown, the spread of returns across sectors remains similar, with income driving the bulk of returns. Retail and residential sectors are performing well at 9.4% and 9.2%, respectively. There is also increasing polarisation of returns in the industrial sector, with the South East lagging the rest of the UK as rental growth slows. Similarly, offices are polarised across London and the ‘big six’ cities, as occupiers prioritise location and quality.
    Annual capital value growth fell below 2% for the first time since January 2025, causing total returns to slow in recent months. Most notably, after several robust quarters of growth, the retail and residential sectors are softening. Offices remain the laggard at -1.4% over the three months to November. Despite monetary policy unwinding 150 basis points (bps) since its recent peak, significant yield compression is yet to feed through as investor uncertainty weighs on the market.  
    Mirroring 2024’s strong final quarter, direct investment activity picked up over the fourth quarter, with over £16 billion worth of transactions. This was 50% higher than the third quarter [2]. Annual investment volumes of £50 billion over 2025 compared favourably against recent years and the pre-pandemic average. Despite uncertainty over the Budget, investors remained committed to navigating a tighter investment market, engaging in joint ventures, and investing in portfolio and platform deals. Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) continued to sell throughout the year; cross-border capital remained active, with increasing activity from Canadian and Japanese capital. 

    Outlook for risk and performance

    The Budget delivered various tax increases to a sanguine market reaction, which meant that the market ended 2025 with a sense of stability. Investment volumes took a pause in the direct run-up to the Budget, but ended the year in their stride. This suggests a rosier start to 2026 as investors gain clarity. Compared with this time last year, medium- to long-dated UK government bond yield curves have settled between 20-50bps lower. At the same time, inflation is moderating in line with expectations, productivity forecasts are light but positive, and we expect further interest rate cuts. All of this supports real estate performance, but with sector-specific risks. 
    UK real estate looks set to deliver healthy returns in 2026, although affordability challenges will persist in certain subsectors and submarkets. Changes in business rates may also have a significant impact across hospitality, logistics, and parts of the retail sector. In combination, these will temper overall rental growth expectations in the short-to-medium term, but challenging development economics should ultimately provide a floor. We expect conservative levels of yield compression to feature this year, depending on the segment and quality of the asset. In contrast, sub-segments with structural concerns (such as PBSA) could see swift outward yield movement.

    UK total return forecasts from September 2025

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