Someone wants a new-build flat in Leeds, has a fixed deposit, and no patience for trawling a dozen separate housebuilder sites that each only show their own stock. That is the gap New Homes For Sale sets out to fill. It pulls together more than 1,500 developments from roughly 100 builders across England, Scotland and Wales into one searchable place, so a buyer filters by location, bedroom count, price band and property type and sees apartments, houses, bungalows and townhouses side by side instead of one brand at a time. New Homes For Sale has been at this since 1998 and moved fully online in 2009, which is a long run for a property site that never pivoted into something flashier.
That longevity shows in how the audience is carved up. First-time buyers, families trading up, investors, people chasing shared-ownership stock, and retirement-age buyers aged 60 and over all get pointed at relevant listings. The shared-ownership angle in particular gets its own explained section, not a footnote, which is the right call given how much confusion surrounds the scheme. Two calculators sit alongside the search: one works out an affordability budget, the other estimates stamp duty. Both answer questions a new-build buyer hits early, before they have spoken to anyone. Registering an account adds email alerts tied to saved searches, so a buyer waiting on a specific area or price point hears when something matches instead of checking back manually. None of this is novel for property portals, but it is the right toolkit for the audience and it is present.
Reading beyond the listings
The editorial side is more substantial than the brief description of a "portal" implies. New Homes For Sale carries buying guides, area information pages, financial advice, shared-ownership explainers, and a section dedicated to green and eco developments. Breaking out the eco category is a sensible choice given how much new-build marketing now leans on energy performance. The site also runs development event listings: launch days and open weekends where builders release plots. Surfacing those is genuinely useful since they are easy to miss if you only follow one developer.
That content depth pays off because a lot of the real work in buying new build is not the search itself, it is understanding what you are signing up for: leasehold terms, completion timelines, the difference between Help to Buy successors and shared ownership. A site that bundles guidance with stock saves a buyer bouncing between a portal and a separate advice site. Whether every guide is current is something only a reader on the page can judge, but the categories cover the questions people actually arrive with.
New Homes For Sale also markets itself to housebuilders, estate agents and housing associations as a lead-generation channel, selling listing packages and pointing to a database it describes as over a million registered buyers. That claim is the company's own and cannot be checked from outside, so treat it as a sales figure rather than an independent fact. It does explain the business model, though: the consumer side stays free because the supply side pays for exposure and leads. For grounding, the company is registered at Companies House under number 03106109, which lines up with the 1998 origin and gives the operation a verifiable legal footing.
Where the experience frays is contact. The homepage shows no phone number and no physical address, and while a "Contact us" link sits in the navigation, the details are not surfaced where a first-time visitor would look. In practice New Homes For Sale routes most contact through listing-level enquiry forms, so a buyer interested in a specific development can reach the relevant builder or agent without ever needing the portal's own line. That design choice makes sense for a lead-generation platform, but anyone wanting to speak to New Homes For Sale directly, about the platform itself, has to go hunting for it.
Outside reputation is the weak part of the picture. A Trustpilot profile exists for New Homes For Sale but it holds a single review, which is too little to read anything into one way or the other. No ratings turned up on Google, Yelp, Facebook or elsewhere. For a portal that has been online since 2009, that quietness is worth noting. It does not indicate anything alarming, but it means a prospective user cannot lean on a crowd of past visitors to confirm the experience and has to judge New Homes For Sale on what the site itself presents.
The overall picture
What the site presents is coherent. The search filters map onto how new-build buyers actually think, the calculators answer the money questions up front, the alert system respects that buying a home is a months-long wait, and the guide library covers the awkward parts of the process. The eco-development and event sections add something most generic property searches skip. A buyer comparing New Homes For Sale against going builder-by-builder gets real aggregation, not a wrapper over a single feed.
The honest position is a competent, long-running aggregator that does the practical jobs well. Two things remain unresolved: confirming the platform's track record from any third-party source, and finding a route to contact New Homes For Sale directly rather than through an individual listing. Those gaps stand, and neither closes just by using the search. What does close is whether the available stock is broad enough to be worth the visit, and on that front New Homes For Sale delivers: 1,500-plus developments spread across three British nations, filterable in the ways buyers need, with the financial maths handled on the same page.
Business address
NewHomesForSale.co.uk Ltd
Basepoint Business Centre,
Evesham,
Worcs
WR11 1GP
United Kingdom