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For Faversham agents

Property video for Faversham estate agents

Turn your Faversham listing photos into a branded, cinematic walkthrough — automatically, for Rightmove, Zoopla and social. No filming, no editing.

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Faversham sells on character and on the town itself. Often called England's oldest market town, it keeps a working medieval market place, a tightly knit conservation-area core and hundreds of listed buildings — Tudor timber frames, Georgian frontages and the old maltings and warehouses down by the creek. Homes here are bought as much for the walk to the market and the brewery as for their floor area, and that is exactly the story a still gallery struggles to tell. A short, moving walkthrough recovers it, and gives an agent the same considered marketing on a beamed cottage in the centre as on a family house out towards the marshes.

A UK residential property

Why video matters for Faversham agents

Faversham is a small, much-loved market town, and the people buying into it tend to know exactly what they are after: a period home with genuine character, in a real town that still has its market, its independent shops and the oldest brewery in the country a few streets away. You have local families trading up, downsizers wanting to swap a larger house for somewhere walkable, and commuters weighing the move out of London now they only need to be in the office part of the week. They are largely looking at the same pool of stock on Rightmove and Zoopla — so when two agents list comparable period homes near the market place, the listing that moves is usually the one that shows the home and the town best, not the one with the longest bullet list.

Period and listed homes are also the hardest to photograph honestly, and Faversham is full of them. A timber-framed house on Abbey Street, a Georgian frontage with rooms that run deeper than they look, a converted maltings with exposed brick and beams — these tell their story through sequence and scale. You understand the home as you move through it. A wide-angle photo straightens what is charmingly uneven and crops out the flow; a walkthrough lets a buyer read the layout and the age of the place the way they would on a viewing, which matters all the more when so many of the homes are protected and quirky by nature.

And much of Faversham's pull is the setting. Demand here is heavily town-led: the cobbles and the market place, the lanes down to Faversham Creek, the marsh and waterside walks on the edge of town, and the reassurance of the station on the line to Victoria and St Pancras with the M2 close by. A clip that closes on the market, a creekside lane or the path to the platform sells the address and the lifestyle, not just the rooms — and in Faversham the address is a large part of why people buy.

In a town where two agents can be marketing near-identical period houses a few doors apart, the moving version is what makes a buyer stop scrolling — and stopping is most of the battle.

The Faversham property mix

Listed & period homes

Tudor timber frames, Georgian townhouses and Victorian terraces, many of them listed. Their value is in detail and proportion — the things a moving shot conveys and a photo straightens out.

The market-town centre

The conservation-area core, the medieval market place and the lanes around it are part of the sale. Ending on the street and the frontage shows context a cropped interior can't.

Creekside & converted stock

Old maltings, warehouses and waterside homes near Faversham Creek. Brick, beams and a sense of how the spaces open up come alive in a walkthrough that a still set rarely captures.

Family homes towards the marshes

On the edges of town, larger family houses with gardens sell on space and setting. A walkthrough links the rooms and shows the plot in a way a set of photos rarely stitches together.

Commuters & downsizers

The station to Victoria and St Pancras and the nearby M2 pull buyers out of London. Video lets them rule a home in or out before they travel down, so the viewings you book are serious ones.

The town & waterside setting

The market, the brewery, the creek and the marsh walks. Closing on the surroundings turns a property into an address — and the address is half of why people buy in Faversham.

The right format

For Faversham stock, let the home set the pace. A characterful timber-framed or Georgian house rewards a slightly slower, more considered walkthrough that lingers on the detail — beams, fireplaces, sash windows, the courtyard — while a brisk family-home sale or a creekside conversion wants a tighter cut. Either way, open on the strongest room, move through the living space in a sequence that makes the layout obvious, and close on the market place, the lane or the walk to the station. The same edit should travel: a 16:9 master for the portal and your site, a 9:16 cut for Reels, Stories and TikTok, and a 1:1 version for the feed.

Best format
16:9 & 9:16
Ideal length
25–45 sec
Show first
Character & detail
You get
Three formats

How Listingly makes it

Paste your listing

Drop in any ME13-postcode listing URL. Listingly pulls in the photos and details you've already uploaded — no filming, no shoot, no trip back to the property.

Pick your brand

Choose your Brand Kit — logo, colours, fonts and music — so the walkthrough looks like your agency and matches the rest of your Faversham marketing.

Get every format

One render gives you a 16:9 master plus 9:16 and 1:1 cuts, ready for the portal, your site and social. Listingly works with agents across Faversham entirely online.

What's video worth on your listings?

A clearer listing that wins more instructions and sells faster can be worth far more than it costs. Put your own numbers in and see the return across your stock.

Open the calculator

Common questions

Do you have an office in Faversham?

No — Listingly is a remote service and works with agents in Faversham and across Kent entirely online. You paste a listing, we build the video; there's no local office to visit and nothing to arrange on site.

Does it suit listed and period homes in the conservation area?

Yes — that's where it earns its keep. Beams, shopfront frontages, sash windows and the way medieval and Georgian rooms connect read far better in a moving walkthrough than in a wide-angle photo that straightens out the character.

Can it show the creek, the market and the walks nearby?

It can. Closing on the market place, a lane towards the creek or the marsh footpaths turns a property into an address — and in Faversham the town and the setting are a large part of why people buy.

Will it work for London commuters and downsizers?

That's a strong use case. Buyers weighing the move from London can rule a home in or out from the video before they travel down, and a clip that closes on the walk to the station does the commute reassurance for you.

Do I need to film anything?

No. Paste the listing and Listingly builds the video from the photos you already have, then exports 16:9, 9:16 and 1:1 from one render.

No filming, no editing software, no shoot day. Paste a Faversham listing and the video is built from the photos that are already there.

Get a free video

Send us a Faversham listing and we'll make a branded walkthrough, free.

Get a free video