Posts with tag: average house price

Average Flat Price Rose by 60% Over the Last Decade

Flats have experienced the highest price growth of all property types in the last decade, rising by an average of 60% since 2005, compared with a 38% increase in price for all homes, revealed research by the Halifax.

The bank found that the average flat saw £730 added to its value every month in the past ten years, taking the typical price from £145,800 in 2005 to £233,400 today.

As price growth for flats has surpassed that for all other home types, first time buyers are becoming increasingly attracted to semi-detached houses, according to Halifax.

Average Flat Price Rose by 60% Over the Last Decade

Average Flat Price Rose by 60% Over the Last Decade

Meanwhile, buy-to-let investors have started favouring flats, a potential cause of the price increases. Data from the Council for Mortgage Lenders (CML) shows that 36% of mortgages issued to landlords have been for flats.

This rises to around two-thirds in London, making flats the most popular property type for buy-to-let investors. Read more from the CML here: /buy-to-let-landlords-owe-equivalent-of-hong-kong-economy-in-mortgages/

The 60% price growth of flats compares with an average increase of 21% for detached houses and 28% for bungalows.

However, the surge in prices has been predominantly fuelled by the capital, where the prices of flats – accounting for half of all housing stock in London – have risen by an average of 67% in the last ten years.

There are also massive regional variations. The average price of a flat in London is £370,200, a huge difference to the typical prices of £102,900, £110,000 and £113,100 in the North of England, the East Midlands and Wales, respectively.

Although flats experienced the strongest price growth in the capital, Scotland and the South West in the past decade, they have performed a lot worse in several other regions.

The average price of a flat has fallen in two parts of the country since 2005 – by 7% in the East Midlands and by 2% in Yorkshire and the Humber.

Among first time buyers, semi-detached houses have risen in popularity, accounting for 28% of purchases in 2015 compared with 21% in 2005.

Housing Economist at the Halifax, Martin Ellis, comments: “Flats have recorded larger price gains over the past ten years than any other property type.

“The national increase in flat prices has been led by London, where flats account for roughly one in two property sales – substantially higher than for the country as a whole.”

He adds, however, that overall, semi-detached and terraced houses are the most popular choices among buyers: “First time buyers have switched to some extent away from flats – reflecting their large price increases – towards semi-detached homes over the last decade.”1

1 http://www.theguardian.com/money/2015/sep/23/average-uk-flat-value-rises-60-per-cent-past-decade

 

 

Average House Price to Reach £300,000 in the Next Three Months

Published On: September 22, 2015 at 2:21 pm

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Categories: Property News

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The average UK house price could reach £300,000 in the next three months, according to Rightmove.

Low interest rates and a lack of supply have driven property prices to a new record high.

House prices rose by an average of £2,550 in September, the greatest September increase since 2002.

The property portal reported that the 15 most expensive counties, including Surrey, Hertfordshire and Oxfordshire, have experienced price growth double the national average, at 1.8% in September. Fewer homeowners in these places are deciding to sell their homes.

House price growth in the most expensive counties

Position County Average house price September 2015

Average house price August 2015

1 Surrey £545,841 £537,270
2 Hertfordshire £460,074 £460,956
3 Oxfordshire £437,042 £431,701
4 Buckinghamshire £432,692 £425,163
5 Berkshire £430,486 £422,546
6 West Sussex £375,155 £364,007
7 East Sussex £354,284 £352,730
8 Kent £341,585 £334,050
9 Essex £334,472 £324,220
10 Dorset £324,841 £320,529
11 Hampshire £321,589 £313,535
12 Cambridgeshire £291,636 £281,270
13 Avon £291,326 £285,419
14 Gloucestershire £290,478 £288,080
15 Somerset £288,413 £283,557

In the north, new vendors were down 4.9% and 7.1% in the south, adds Rightmove.

In London, the average house price is expected to hit £1m by 2020.

The average asking price in the capital was £620,003 in September, a 0.8% increase on the previous record set in July. The annual rate of growth is now 9.5%, or £53,923 per year, due to a shortage of supply and rising demand from international investors. If this pace continues, the average London home will cost £1m in 2020.

Director and Housing Market Analyst at Rightmove, Miles Shipside, says that this rate is not sustainable.

He explains: “While we are not suggesting that this level of growth can or will be maintained, this extrapolation illustrates the desperate need for more building and more affordable housing in and around the capital.”1

1 http://www.independent.co.uk/news/business/news/average-uk-house-price-to-hit-300000-in-the-next-three-months-10511047.html

Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Published On: September 21, 2015 at 3:55 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Average Asking Price Hits Record High

Property asking prices in England and Wales have soared to a record high of £295,000, reveals research by Rightmove.

If house prices in London continue to rise at the current pace, the average home in the capital could cost £1m by 2020, adds the property portal.

Head of Rightmove, Miles Shipside, comments on the findings: “High demand, lack of suitable supply and increasingly stretched affordability are leading to some extremes in market forces in different sectors and parts of the country.”

The average increase of 0.9%, or £2,550, this month was the highest for September since 2002.

Outside London, the average asking price is £294,834. In the capital, which has experienced a 9.5% rise over the last year, the typical property has an asking price of £620,003.

Shipside says this “illustrates the desperate need for more building and more affordable housing in and around the capital”1.

Some counties in the south, such as Hertfordshire, Berkshire, Cambridgeshire and Essex, witnessed greater growth than London.

However, the North East, North West, Yorkshire and the Humber, the West Midlands, East Midlands and Wales saw monthly declines.

1 Shaw, V. (2015) ‘Asking price of average home hits a record £295k’, Metro, 21 September, p.32

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

UK Property Market Hardest for First Time Buyers

Published On: September 7, 2015 at 2:12 pm

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Categories: Landlord News

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UK Property Market Hardest for First Time Buyers

UK Property Market Hardest for First Time Buyers

First time buyers in the UK are facing some of the most difficult market conditions in Europe, according to new research.

Almost nine out of ten (89%) surveyed in a poll said it was getting harder for first time buyers to afford a home, making those in the UK the second most negative about getting on the property ladder, with those in Luxembourg the most downbeat.

The ING International study questioned almost 15,000 people in 15 countries.

The research also found that house prices in the UK increased by 8% between 2014-15 – eight times the European average.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Gap Between House Prices and Wages Widens

Published On: September 3, 2015 at 4:42 pm

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Categories: Finance News

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The gap between house prices and wages has widened so much in the last 20 years that even in the most affordable parts of England and Wales, buyers must spend six times their income on purchasing a home, according to new analysis.

The situation is most serious in London, where the median house is now 12 times the median income in the capital.

The Guardian has analysed 19m home sales over 20 years from Land Registry and HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) data. The research shows that in every region of England and Wales, there have been sharp rises in property prices in proportion to wages, causing concerns that millions of aspiring buyers will be priced out of the market.

Ratio of house prices to incomes in 2012-13

Region

Median income Median house price

Ratio

London £24,600 £300,000 12.2
South East £23,100 £229,000 9.9
South West £20,300 £187,500 9.2
East of England £21,900 £192,995 8.8
West Midlands £19,900 £145,000 7.3
East Midlands £19,900 £137,748 6.9
Wales £19,400 £132,000 6.8
Yorkshire and the Humber £19,600 £130,000 6.6
North West £19,700 £130,000 6.6
North East £19,700 £120,000 6.1

A buyer earning the median salary for their region in 1995 would have spent between 3.2 and 4.4 times their earnings on a house, depending on where they lived. In 2012-13 – the latest year for which complete data is available – the median house price had increased to between 6.1 and 12.2 times median regional wages.

In 1995, the median salary in London was £19,000 and the median house price was £83,000, meaning that people spent 4.4 times their income on buying a home. However, by 2012-13, the median income had grown to £24,600 in the capital and the median house price had risen to £300,000, causing people to spend 12.2 times their wages on a property.

Even in more affordable regions, prices have grown substantially. In the most inexpensive region, the North East, the proportion of earnings spent on homes has almost doubled in 20 years, rising from 3.4 times the median income in 1995 to 6.1 times in 2012.

Gap Between House Prices and Wages Widens

Gap Between House Prices and Wages Widens

Residential Research Director at Hamptons International estate agent, Fionnuala Earley, says: “House prices have completely outstripped income growth.

“The biggest factor is that in the run-up to the crash, interest rates were low, so you could afford to service a bigger mortgage then. There was also low inflation on essentials like food, fuel, transport and utilities, so people had more money in their pockets and were able to gear up for bigger mortgages.”1 

The director of affordable housing campaign group PricedOut, Duncan Stott, says that the figures suggest the gap between the “housing haves and the housing have-nots” is getting even wider.

He explains: “It’s not just that every region has got more expensive, but how much more expensive some regions have got. When you look at places where housing prices are increasing, places like Cambridge, Reading, Bristol, Oxford… These are places where jobs are being created but they’re completely unaffordable, so there’s a huge mismatch between the labour market and the housing market.”

Behind London, the most expensive regions for homes are the South East and South West, where properties cost 9.9 and 9.2 times the median salaries of those regions respectively.

After the south, the East of England follows with 8.8 times the median income, the West Midlands is next at 7.3 times, then the East Midlands at 6.9, Wales at 6.8 and Yorkshire and the Humber and the North West, both at 6.6 times median wages.

The most expensive postcode district to buy a home in 2014 was Mayfair, London. 26 properties were sold there last year, with a median price of £2.9m. The most expensive home sold in that area cost £18.4m and the cheapest was £155,100.

The 36 most expensive postcode districts in the country were in the capital, with Leatherhead in Surrey coming 37th. In Leatherhead, the median house price in 2014 was £775,000 and the most expensive property sold that year for £2.9m.

The cheapest postcode district was central Bradford in West Yorkshire, where there were 191 property sales in 2014. The median house price in BD1 was £40,000 and the cheapest sale was £29,000.

Behind Bradford, the most affordable districts were Ferndale in the Rhondda Valley, followed by Grimsby in Lincolnshire, New Tredegar in Caerphilly and Middlesbrough

The most expensive home sold to an individual in 2014 was in London and cost £50m, while the cheapest was £7,000 in the North East.

The gap between house prices and earnings has caused the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) to put the UK in the category of countries “where houses appear overvalued but prices are rising.” 1

The OECD warns that economies in this category, including Canada, Australia and New Zealand, are prone to the risk of price corrections.

Stott cautions that increasing house prices mean more people will be permanent renters, which could have various effects on society.

He says: “It takes a toll on young people who can’t afford a house. A lot of us are going to be spending our lives renting and we need to be thinking about the implications for children growing up in private rentals and how on earth we pay the rent when we retire, which no one is talking about.

“It’s an unsustainable setup we’ve got, if we don’t deal with problems now – the lack of supply, lack of mortgage controls and lack of property tax reform – we’re going to sleepwalk into these problems.”1 

1 http://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/sep/02/housing-market-gulf-salaries-house-prices

Transaction Levels Drop 15%, Reports Land Registry

Published On: September 1, 2015 at 10:21 am

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Transaction Levels Drop 15%, Reports Land Registry

Transaction Levels Drop 15%, Reports Land Registry

Transaction levels dropped in the first months of this year, according to the latest report from Land Registry.

Between February and May, the monthly average for completed sales in England and Wales was 61,283. The average for the same period last year was 70,029.

In May, the latest month for which Land Registry has sales figures, there were 65,619 transactions, a 15% decrease from the 77,488 recorded in May 2014.

In London, there were 7,488 completed sales in May, a 24% decline from 9,808 in May last year.

Land Registry also revealed that the average house price in England and Wales was £183,861 in July, a 1.7% monthly increase and a 4.6% annual rise.

The highest growth in prices was witnessed in the East of England, at 2.8% on a monthly basis and 8.9% yearly.

London house prices are still significantly higher than the average, at £488,782, up 2.5% on the month and 8.3% annually.