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Savills raises its total return forecast for 2026-2030 to 7.8% in UK Cross-Sector outlook

Savills has raised its outlook for the average total return for the next five years for UK real estate in its 2026 cross-sector outlook, forecasting an average return of 7.8% per annum (pa), up from 7.4% pa in 2025, with the international real estate advisor saying that the UK’s outlook is more stable than it was a year ago.   

In its annual cross-sector forecasts, covering the commercial, residential and rural sectors, Savills says that the importance of income in delivering real estate returns has risen across the board, primarily due to the expectation that the pace of interest rate tightening will slow and that the transmission of base rate cuts to the bond market will be slower than it expected in 2025. 

Shopping centres and buy-to-let residential in Yorkshire & Humber come top of Savills ranking for comparative returns for investors over the next five years, although their returns profiles are quite different. Savills forecasts that income will make up the majority of returns on shopping centres, as cyclical lows drive strong rental growth in dominant locations over the medium-term. This should generate more institutional investor interest in the sub-sector, with very limited risk of shopping centres being replaced by better schemes if they are already dominant. Buy-to-let residential in Yorkshire & Humber, meanwhile, is more split between capital value growth and income return, with Savills forecasting that the north of the UK will continue to deliver a better total return for residential investors than the south in the near future. In the rural sector, meanwhile, land will continue to perform well long-term, offering steady capital increases year-on-year, and providing diversification in portfolios.

In total, 13 UK property sub-sectors are forecast to see annualised returns of over 8% between 2026-2030 in Savills outlook. 

Savills says that development viability will remain challenging throughout 2026, and this will lead to shortages of prime assets in most locations, ensuring that rental growth will generally be sustained at its current higher than normal levels. 

Richard Rees, Managing Director, Savills UK, comments: “Overall, we are forecasting a slightly more muted recovery in UK real estate investment markets over the next five years than we have seen emerge from previous downturns, but there still should be a steady improvement in both volumes and values across 2026. The story on interest rates is encouraging: expectations point to a 50-basis-point reduction, bringing rates closer to 3%. This shift, combined with narrowing bid-ask spreads and greater realism among vendors, suggests a market ready for more activity. Residual pent-up demand in residential remains, rural property continues to attract strong interest, and scarcity in prime offices, retail, and industrial space is driving rental growth. The total returns on offer will be broadly in line with the long-run average, and this should ensure that property remains a key part of many investors’ portfolios.” 

Commercial property: 2026 should see a rising recognition that the UK is in a comparatively good place

According to Savills, the UK’s commercial property occupational story will remain robust in 2026, based around continued low levels of development activity and normal levels of tenant demand, which will deliver higher than normal prime rental growth across all sectors. However, tenants will continue to be extremely selective on location, with prime buildings in secondary spots proving harder to let than it would expect at this phase of a ‘normal’ property cycle. Another area, it says, where the cycle is clearly different is the lack of distress in the investment market. While this is broadly positive, the lack of distressed sales has created a target-poor environment for the opportunistic buyers and stymied the recycling of capital through the market. Savills says that it expects to see a gentle trickle of motivated sales next year, but not a flood, and that while it forecasts a gentle increase in prices and investment volumes over 2026, there is unlikely to a huge surge in activity. Overall, however, following a year of uncertainty, the international real estate advisor says that the UK’s outlook is more stable than it was a year ago; businesses and investors should be more capable of making balanced decisions, and there should be growing recognition internationally that the UK market is in a comparatively strong position compared to many of its peers. Savills is therefore currently forecasting approximately £55bn of commercial property investment in 2026, slightly up from 2025’s forecast full-year total of circa. £50bn.

Offices remain Savills favoured commercial property pick for investors in 2026, due to steady (but highly location-focused) tenant demand, a lack of new supply, and better than normal rental growth. It also highlights retail as remaining in the growth phase of a traditional cycle, with vacancy rates in dominant locations at cyclical lows and delivering demonstrable rental growth, and says that medium-term it remains optimistic about retail now that omnichannel is omnipresent and shopping centres are looking increasingly defensive against some wider structural changes. Finally, the ongoing the AI and cloud-driven boom in demand for data centre space will see further stiff competition for land.

Rural property: More opportunities available in the sector than ever before

Savills forecasts that in the rural markets farmland supply and values will stabilise in 2026, before increasing from 2027, although trends and pressures affecting farming enterprises differ among regions so growth in certain areas will offset declines in others. It anticipates that overall growth in farmland values will resume from 2027, coinciding with increased policy clarity within the agricultural industry, and that land, when compared to other asset classes, continues to perform well long-term and returns steady capital increases year-on-year, so remains a stable haven and provides diversification in long-term portfolios.

Savills says that through increased collaboration across private and public landscapes, opportunities are available for the sector from more sources than ever before. Food production, development - whether for housing or data centres - energy generation, and forestry (as part of environmental strategies) are set to drive investor demand through 2026 and beyond. According to Savills, forestry, like many capital markets, was a mixed picture during 2025, with uncertainty around the wider economic outlook dampening buyer interest, but the weakening price trends seen during 2023-2024 appear to have stabilised and the outlook for forestry prices in 2026 will be linked to wider global economic trends, although there continue to be regional nuances.  

The UK’s policy environment is also supporting the acquisition of land for energy uses, says Savills, setting a clear target for each technology class and each region, making finding sites that can be connected to the grid essential to investor and developer success. For the right piece of land for solar (or similar renewable assets) investors can expect rents in the region of £1,000 per acre annually, inflation-linked to offer security over the term of the contract, often over multiple decades. 

Residential property: 2026 a quieter year in policy terms, after the landmark events of 2025

For the residential sector, Savills says 2025 heralded a number of landmark events which, alongside the general economic backdrop, are set to shape the returns generated from different parts of the residential market over the next five years. While it has downgraded its mainstream house price forecast for 2026 to 2%, over the medium-term Savills says that the outlook appears brighter, especially in late cycle markets across the North, Scotland and Wales. It also anticipates stronger price growth and increased sales activity from 2027 will increase housebuilders’ appetite for development and activity in the land market; housing associations will also be more active in the latter as they have a short window for buying sites under the new Social and Affordable Homes Programme. Those investors holding strategic land will have a good opportunity to secure the planning which unlocks its development potential, Savills says, although uncertainties remain regarding what the Government will seek to extract via land value capture.  

In the institutionally-led living sectors, the Build to Rent development pipeline is set to recover, both as housebuilders look for more routes to market and investors see competitive returns re-emerge, while in multifamily investors are set to focus more of their activity on existing units which deliver a stabilised income stream, with some current owners look to recycle capital, and others look to consolidate their position by expanding in order to build further critical mass in 2026. Savills says the expectation is that those looking to exit first generation stock will provide opportunities for other investors looking to enhance current returns through asset management, operational efficiencies and targeted capital expenditure. Meanwhile, in the student accommodation sector investors in 2026 will need to ensure the thoughtful underwriting of locations, with a tighter focus on the financial strength and growth potential of individual institutions, and be highly selective in choosing the right operating partner, according to Savills.

Savills full 2026 cross-sector outlook report will be available from 6 January 2026.

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