Regional HPI
Annual house price growth edges up in March
- UK house prices up 1.6% compared with a year ago
- Northern Ireland best performing region, with prices up 4.6%
- South West weakest performing region, with prices down 1.7% over the year
House prices fall 1.8% over the course of 2023
- House prices down 1.8% compared with a year ago
- Northern Ireland and Scotland the only parts of the UK to see prices rise in 2023
- East Anglia the weakest performing region with prices down 5.2% over the year
House price growth remained weak in September
- House prices unchanged over the month, but remain down 5.3% year on year (c.£14,500)
- All regions recorded annual house price falls in Q3
- South West was the weakest performing region, with prices down 6.3% year on year
House prices relatively stable in June but annual growth remains in negative territory
- House prices remain broadly flat over the month, but down 3.5% compared with June 22
- All regions except Northern Ireland recorded annual price falls in Q2
- East Anglia was the weakest performing region with prices down 4.7% year-on-year
House prices record seventh consecutive monthly decline in March
- House prices down 3.1% year-on-year in March – the largest annual decline since July 2009
- All regions saw a slowing in price growth in Q1, with most seeing small year-on-year falls
- West Midlands was the strongest performing region, while Scotland remained the weakest
Annual house price growth continued to slow sharply as 2022 drew to a close
- Fourth consecutive monthly decline drives annual house price growth down to 2.8% in December
- All regions record a slowdown in annual price growth in the final quarter of the year
- East Anglia the strongest performing region in 2022, while Scotland was weakest
- Gap between weakest and strongest regions smallest since Society’s regional indices began in 1974
- Since Q1 2020, price growth in detached properties was around double that of flats
Annual house price growth slows to single digits in September
- Modest slowing in annual UK house price growth to 9.5% in September, from 10% in August
- 10 of the UK’s 13 regions recorded slower annual price growth in the third quarter of the year
- South West was the strongest performing region once again, while London remained weakest
Annual house price growth slows in June, but remains in double digits
- Modest slowing in annual UK house price growth to 10.7% in June, from 11.2% in May
- Most regions saw slight slowing in annual growth in Q2
- South West overtook Wales as strongest performing region, while London remained weakest
- South West also strongest performing region through the pandemic
UK house price growth surges to its highest level since 2004
- Annual house price growth increased to 14.3%, from 12.6% in February
- Wales remained strongest performing region in Q1 2022, while London remained weakest
- Detached properties have increased by nearly £68,000 since onset of pandemic, while average flat prices up £24,000
UK house prices end the year at a record high, with annual price growth in double digits
- Annual house price growth increased to 10.4%, from 10.0% in November
- 2021 was the strongest calendar year for house price growth since 2006
- Price of a typical UK home hit record high of £254,822, up nearly £24,000 over the year
- Wales was the strongest performing region in 2021, London the weakest
Annual house price growth slows in September, but remains in double digits
- Annual house price growth eased back to 10.0%, from 11.0% in August.
- Prices little changed month-on-month, after taking account of seasonal factors
- Wales and Northern Ireland the strongest performing regions in Q3, London the weakest
- Cost of typical mortgage as share of take home pay above long run average in 10 of 13 UK regions, up from 1 pre-pandemic (see p2)
Annual house price growth accelerates above 13% in June, with all UK regions recording a pickup in Q2
- Annual house price growth rises to 13.4%, the highest level since November 2004
- Prices up 0.7% month-on-month, after taking account of seasonal factors
- Northern Ireland sees strongest growth in Q2, Scotland the weakest, closely followed by London