The housing market is set to remain "robust" in the coming months despite property prices dipping slightly in September, Halifax has reported.

A 0.9% monthly fall in property values in September took the typical price of a home to £202,859 - which is still 8.6% higher than a year ago.

Halifax said that monthly movements in prices can be "volatile" and quarterly changes in house price growth can often be a more reliable indicator of the underlying direction of the housing market.

On a quarterly basis, house prices between July and September were 2% higher than they were during the previous three months.

A tight supply of homes for sale, continued low mortgage rates and economic growth are likely to continue to be "key drivers" behind housing market demand in the coming months, Halifax said.

It pointed to recent figures from HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), showing that UK home sales increased by 3% month-on-month in August to reach 106,480, marking the highest monthly total seen since February 2014.

Halifax also pointed out that the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics) had reported over the summer that the supply of homes for sale had fallen to the lowest levels on its records.

Halifax housing economist Martin Ellis said: "Housing demand has been strengthening recently, underpinned by economic growth, rising real earnings and very low mortgage rates.

"Increasing demand is combining with very low supply to drive robust underlying house price growth. There is little reason to expect any fundamental shift in the key market drivers over the coming months."