Extending vs Moving: Honest Cost Comparison 2026

Every homeowner who needs more space faces the same question: extend or move? The answer depends on your finances, location, and emotional attachment to your home. This guide compares the real costs of both options.

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Cost breakdown

Cost of moving (Dorset, 2026)

For a family moving from a £350,000 3-bed to a £450,000 4-bed: stamp duty on new property (£12,500), estate agent fees on sale (£5,250–£7,000), conveyancing (£2,000–£3,000), surveys (£500–£1,500), removal costs (£1,500–£3,000), renovation/decoration of new home (£5,000–£15,000). Total: £27,000–£42,000 in transaction costs alone.

Cost of extending

A 24m² single-storey extension (the most common project) costs £65,000–£95,000 all-in. A loft conversion costs £48,000–£72,000. Either adds the space of a 4th bedroom, en-suite, or kitchen-diner without moving.

The hidden cost of moving

Moving is not just financial — there is the stress of selling, buying, school changes, commute changes, and the risk of chains collapsing. Many Dorset families extend because they love their neighbourhood, their children's school, and their neighbours.

CostExtendingMoving (£350k → £450k)
Direct cost£65,000–£95,000£100,000 (price uplift)
Transaction costs£0£27,000–£42,000
Total cash outlay£65,000–£95,000£127,000–£142,000
Disruption10–16 weeks3–6 months
School changeNoPossibly
Value added to home5–10%N/A (new property)

Prices based on Dorset rates, 2026

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