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Market town home owners pay a premium of £24,000
People buying a home in a market town in England face a premium of £24,000 with one in ten such towns having a price premium of at least £100,000, new research shows. Overall house prices in market towns have increased by an average of £460 per month since 2005 and the average house price in an English market town, at £250,686, is 7.2 times average gross earnings of all full time workers. The research from Lloyds Bank shows that prices in market towns across England are on average £23,938 or 11% higher than their county average. However, with its location close to the Chiltern Hills and within a 40 minute commute to London Beaconsfield in South Buckinghamshire has the largest house price premium across England, with homes selling at 189% or £652,178 above the county average. Bakewell in the Derbyshire Dales, close to the famous Chatsworth House, and Wetherby in West Yorkshire both have an average house price that is double their county average; in cash terms the premiums are £175,327 and £162,995 respectively. In fact, one in 10 of the market towns in the survey have a house price premium of at least £100,000. They include Southwell in Nottinghamshire with an average premium of £131,419), Keswick in Cumbria at £130,100, Cheltenham in Gloucestershire at £128,591 and Ringwood in Hampshire at £125,175. Southern England dominates the top 10 most expensive market towns. With Beaconsfield top with an average house price of £997,222, next is Lewes at £408,641 and Midhurst at £403,893, both in Sussex. Outside southern England, Bakewell is the most expensive market town with an average property value of £351,092, the research also shows. The average house price in market towns across England has risen by £55,179 or 28% from £195,507 in 2005 to £250,686 in 2015. This is equivalent to an average rise of £460 per month over the past decade. The biggest increase in prices over the past decade was in Beaconsfield where the average price rose by 71% or £414,126 followed by Didcot in Oxfordshire at 52% or £101,374, Lewes on the south coast at 51% or £138,733, Yateley at 45% or £105,262, then Thame, Petersfield, Ferryhill, and Cirencester all at 43%. ‘Homes in market towns typically command a significant premium over their neighbouring towns. The quality of life benefits often associated with living in such locations are still proving popular among home buyers,’ said Andy Mason, mortgages director at Lloyds Bank. ‘Market towns are often particularly attractive for those looking to move into more idyllic surroundings without sacrificing many of the important amenities they currently enjoy,’ he added. Continue reading
UK property demand now higher outside of London, says market report
Demand for property in the UK is now higher outside of London, increasing by 5% since the second quarter of the year, according to latest market intelligence report. Bexley remains the hottest spot in the UK with demand climbing a 3% quarter on quarter to 77%, followed by Watford at 72%, Bristol at 71%, Reading at 68% and Barking at 65%. The rest of the top 10 is made up of Sutton at 64%, Cambridge at 67% and Medway, Havering and Brentwood all on 64%, the property hotspot index from online estate agent eMoov shows. The London Borough of Ealing has seen the most drastic turn around in property demand with growth of 74%, although at an index figure of 38%, demand in the area is still relatively low. Aberdeenshire is the coldest spot in the UK with demand at just 10% and demand in the area has halved since the third quarter of 2014. Highland is the only other Scottish region in the top 10 coldest spots, with demand at just 17%. Westminster at 15% and Kensington and Chelsea at 17% are the only London entries, with the other six coldest locations all located in the North West. Camden is the fifth biggest faller over the course of the year, with demand reducing by a quarter year on year with Westminster down 33% and Islington down 15%. The rest of the year’s biggest fallers are again, located across the north of the country. ‘In early 2014, we predicted the ripple effect London as an individual, market would have on the UK property market. Although there are pockets of the capital that have enjoyed sustained demand, it’s the commuter belt that is currently top for property demand in the UK,’ said the firm’s chief executive officer Russell Quirk. ‘The uncertainty of the situation in Aberdeenshire and the local oil industry, seems to have had serious repercussions to the local property market. Not only is it bottom, but demand has halved in just a year. Unfortunately there can only be one consequence to property prices in the area, which is inevitably a drop,’ he added. Continue reading
Property tax changes in England and Scotland weigh on prime country house market
Prime country house prices in the UK rose by 0.7% between July and September, continuing the modest upward trend of growth that started in early 2013, the latest research report shows. Prices have shifted upwards now for 11 consecutive quarters with annual growth also up slightly to 2.7% on average, up from 2.3% in the second quarter but down from a recent high of 5.2% in 2014. The market continues to feel the impact of the increased cost of stamp duty, following the Autumn Statement in December 2014, according to the report from real estate firm Knight Frank. It says that this continues to weigh on both price growth and activity at the top end of the market. In fact, the latest figures from the Land Registry show that between January and July there have been 35% fewer sales with a value above £1.5m outside of London compared to the same period last year. The prime market below £1.5 million has been less affected by these tax changes and prices for homes in this sector have risen by nearly 4% annually over the year to September. In comparison, over the same time properties priced above £1.5 million, the point at which the 12% rate of stamp duty kicks in, have risen by 2%. Under £1.5 million, price growth has generally been underpinned by demand for homes in urban centres. Price growth in town and city markets including Bristol, Bath and Oxford for example, where buyers continue to be attracted by good schooling, amenities and transport links, has outperformed the wider prime market. ‘There remains a significant price differential between property prices in the prime country market and in London, while anecdotal evidence from agents suggests that there is pent up demand from buyers in the Home Counties and the South West. This could help underpin prices and an increase in activity levels across the market as the year progresses,’ the report says. However, the average prime country house price is still 14% below its 2007 peak. In contrast, prime prices in London are, on average, 34% higher than their previous peak values. ‘The rise in London prices in the last few years means that buyers looking to swap the city for the country are able to get a lot more property for their money, with such buyers able to take advantage of the relative discount which currently exists,’ the report adds. In Scotland the country house market has also been affected by tax changes with the new Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) being introduced in April 2015. The report shows that as a result prices fell by 0.7% between July and September, the first time that prime prices have fallen on a quarterly basis in over two years. The report points out that the levy, which replaced Stamp Duty Land Tax, has resulted in a significant increase in purchase costs for buyers in the prime market and adds that negotiations between buyer and… Continue reading




