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Behavioural finance

Sunk cost fallacy in UK property decisions

"We paid £450k for it in 2022; we won't sell for less." This single sentence has cost UK homeowners more wealth than almost any other financial bias. The sunk cost fallacy — refusing to make rational current decisions because of past investments — is especially destructive in property because the numbers are so large. Here's the behavioural mechanic, why it's so common, and the framework for property exit decisions that ignores the irrelevant past.

Educational only. Property decisions depend on individual circumstances. Specialist advice often warranted. Not financial advice.

What sunk cost fallacy actually is

A sunk cost is a cost that's already been paid and can't be recovered. The rational economic principle: sunk costs are irrelevant to future decisions. Only future costs and benefits should affect choices.

The fallacy: humans systematically give weight to sunk costs anyway. "I paid for this concert ticket so I'm going even though I feel ill." "I've sunk £5,000 into this car repair so I'd better fix the next problem too." "We paid £450k for this house so we can't accept £400k for it."

In each case, the past payment doesn't change the rational current decision. The unwell concertgoer should rest. The car-repair money is gone whether or not you spend more. The house's current market value isn't determined by what you once paid.

Why property is the worst sunk cost trap

Several features make property uniquely susceptible:

Result: many UK homeowners hold properties for years or decades past the rational sell point, because the current market price is "below what we paid".

The exact mechanic

The internal monologue typically goes:

  1. "We paid £450,000 in 2022"
  2. "The estate agent's valuation today is £410,000"
  3. "That's a loss of £40,000"
  4. "We can't sell at a loss; we'll wait until prices recover"
  5. (Years pass; carrying costs — mortgage interest, maintenance, opportunity cost on equity — mount)
  6. "Prices still haven't recovered, but we've now invested too much in the property to sell at a loss"
  7. (Cycle continues indefinitely)

The error: the £40,000 "loss" is not crystallised by the sale. It's already real the moment the market price fell. Refusing to sell doesn't unmake the loss; it just makes you a holder of an asset worth £410k instead of a holder of £410k in cash.

The rational framework for property decisions

The right question is not "what did we pay?" but "what should we do GOING FORWARD?":

Step 1: Establish current market value honestly

Step 2: Evaluate the alternative use of that capital

Imagine you sold today for the current market value, paid off the mortgage, and had the remaining equity in cash. What would you do with it?

If the alternative use is genuinely more valuable to your life than the current property, the rational decision is to sell — regardless of what you paid.

Step 3: Evaluate the cost of NOT selling

Holding a property has ongoing costs:

For a £450k property with £200k equity, holding it for an extra 3 years (waiting for "recovery") costs roughly:

If price recovery during those 3 years is less than £75k, holding cost the household more than the recovery delivered.

The related bias: anchoring

Sunk cost fallacy interacts with "anchoring": the tendency to fixate on a specific reference number when making decisions. The purchase price becomes the anchor; all subsequent value judgements reference it.

You can detect anchoring by noticing thoughts like:

The rational alternative: the property is worth what someone will pay for it today, on the open market. That number bears no necessary relation to the price you once paid.

Real UK scenarios where sunk cost destroys wealth

Example 1: London flat bought at 2022 peak

The Browns bought a London 2-bed flat for £520,000 in February 2022 (near the UK property peak). By 2024:

If they sell now, they unlock £110k equity + take a new £490k mortgage on the £600k house. They can move.

If they wait for "recovery" to £520k, they unlock £160k equity. But:

The "we paid £520k" anchor is preventing a rational life decision. The Browns should evaluate the move based on lifestyle benefit + financial mechanics today, not based on the purchase price.

Example 2: Pre-retirement downsizing

The Patels, 65, own a 4-bed family home in Surrey:

Their children have moved out. The 4 bedrooms aren't needed. Downsizing to a £500k 2-bed would unlock £350k of cash for retirement — potentially adding 10-15 years of comfortable retirement spending.

Common Patel-family conversation:

The first reason (sentimental attachment) is real and legitimate. The second reason (anchoring to purchase price) is irrelevant — the £670k gain is the same whether you realise it now or later. The third reason (waiting for further gains) is gambling against the bird-in-hand.

If retirement income is constrained and quality of life would be improved by £350k of liquid wealth, the rational decision is to downsize. The 27 years of memories don't change the maths.

Example 3: Divorce property division

A divorcing couple, joint property worth £500,000 (paid £480,000 in 2020):

Sunk-cost-affected partner: "But we paid £480k. The market is undervaluing the property. We should hold until it returns to £480k before deciding."

Rational analysis: the property's current value is £500k. The buyout price (£250k each) reflects current value. The fact that they once paid £480k jointly is irrelevant to today's allocation decision. Past purchase price ≠ current fair value.

Practical techniques to overcome property sunk cost bias

1. The "rented from yourself" thought experiment

Imagine you don't own the property. You rent it at the property's notional rental value. Would you choose to rent THIS property, on these terms, today, vs alternatives?

If the answer is "no", you'd be renting somewhere else — selling the property is the rational decision. The fact that you happen to currently own it shouldn't change that.

2. The "cash equivalent" reframe

If someone gave you the property's current market value (£410k) in cash today, would you go and buy this exact property at £410k? Same area, same condition, same everything.

If yes, holding is rational — the property is the best use of that cash.

If no, you'd buy something different (a smaller property, a different location, invest the cash) — selling is the rational decision.

3. The "stranger advice" test

Imagine a friend has the same situation. They tell you: "I bought a property in 2022 for £450k; it's now worth £410k; I want to move to a different area but I can't bring myself to sell for less than I paid."

What would you advise them?

Most people would tell the friend: "the £40k loss is real whether you sell or not; if moving is right for your life, sell." This advice that's easy to give to others is the rational answer for yourself.

4. Time-box the recovery wait

If you genuinely think the price will recover, commit to a specific time horizon: "We'll wait 18 months for recovery; if the price isn't above £X by [date], we'll sell."

This converts an indefinite "we'll wait" into a concrete decision. Often the time-box exposes the irrationality — "we're betting another 18 months of life decisions on a 10% price recovery that may not happen."

When NOT selling IS the right call

Sunk cost reasoning is wrong; that doesn't mean selling is always right. Legitimate reasons to hold a "loss" property:

The test: are you holding for forward-looking reasons (the property still serves your goals best), or for backward-looking reasons (the purchase price)? Only the former is rational.

Endowment effect

Once you own something, you value it more than you would if you didn't own it. Studies show people demand 2x as much to sell something as they'd pay to buy the identical thing. For properties: "I wouldn't accept £420k from a buyer" while simultaneously "I wouldn't pay £420k for this property if I didn't own it".

Loss aversion (again)

Same Kahneman concept from our loss aversion guide. Crystallising a property loss feels 2x more painful than an equivalent gain. The pain of "selling at a loss" disproportionately blocks rational decisions.

Status quo bias

Decisions to keep things the same require less effort and less cognitive defence than decisions to change. Selling, moving, finding a new property, packing 27 years of stuff — all require active effort. Default behaviour favours "stay put", even when staying is wrong.

Frequently asked questions

What if I genuinely think prices will recover?

You might be right — UK property is a long-run growing asset class. But "I think prices will recover" needs to be backed by analysis (interest rate path, local supply, planning, regeneration). And even if right, the recovery has to be larger than carrying costs over the wait period. Many "wait for recovery" arguments lose money over typical wait periods of 3-5 years.

What about inflation eroding the "real loss"?

This is a useful point. A 10% nominal loss in a 4% inflation environment is roughly a 14% real loss after a year. Inflation makes the case for waiting WEAKER, not stronger — the "loss" compounds in real terms even if nominal prices flatline.

How do I deal with my partner's sunk cost bias?

Often more difficult than overcoming your own bias. Suggestions: present the maths objectively without judgement. Use the "stranger advice" test on hypothetical scenarios. Acknowledge sentimental reasons separately from financial reasons. Sometimes a professional mediator (financial planner) helps depersonalise the conversation.

Should I tell estate agents I'm anchored?

Never. Estate agents work for the seller and will work with whatever price expectations you have. If you mention "we want at least £420k", they'll work that figure; if you mention "we paid £450k", they'll push back against lower offers. Stay neutral about expectations; let market evidence (their valuations + comparables) lead.

What if I'm in negative equity?

Negative equity is sunk cost bias on steroids: not only have you "lost" your equity, you'd need to bring extra cash to the sale. Hold to wait for recovery is more defensible here (the financial mechanics force the issue). But: still ask whether your life is best served by THIS property over a 5-10 year horizon, regardless of mathematics.

Does sunk cost apply to investments too?

Yes, identically. "I won't sell this share until it gets back to what I paid" is sunk cost fallacy in equity form. The share's current price isn't determined by your purchase price; it's determined by today's market view of future cashflows. Hold or sell based on the forward view, not the backward.

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