House price boom creates 19 new £1m property markets across England and Wales

Knight Frank’s latest data shows that 19 locations in England and Wales have qualified as £1 million property markets since March 2020. The list has a distinctly suburban flavour but is dominated by London and the south-east.

Related topics:  Finance
Rozi Jones
23rd August 2021
Detached House 345
"The pandemic has left its mark on the UK property market by magnifying existing trends rather than re-writing the rulebook. Things won’t pick up from where they left off in March 2020 but the wider trajectory will feel familiar."

To qualify as a new £1 million market, at least 20% of sales had to be above that threshold in two or more quarters since Q2 2020.

Newquay in Cornwall saw the largest increase (+22%) in the year to March 2021, followed by Ryde on the Isle of Wight (+19%). The top five, which is based on repeat sales data, is completed by Chapeltown in Leeds (+19%), Lymington in the New Forest (+18), and St Austell in Cornwall (+17%).

In London, Hackney (E8), Ealing (W5) and Vauxhall (SW8) have all joined the list. The areas have benefitted as price growth rippled outwards from central London, propelled by large infrastructure projects in the case of Vauxhall and Ealing.

However, more than half the list is outside the London postal district. It is topped by Whetstone (N20) and Farnham (GU10), followed by Kingston Upon Thames (KT2) and Hartfield (TN7). Outside the capital, new £1 million markets include North and West Oxford (OX2), Tunbridge Wells (TN3) and Reading (RG8).

The common thread is the distance from London, highlighting the game of catch-up the rest of the country is playing with the capital in terms of house prices.

However, this process was underway before the pandemic due to growing affordability pressures in London.

The average house price in England and Wales was 47% of the London equivalent in March 2016, the lowest ratio since Land Registry records began in 1995. It has been rising since and stood at 54% in June this year due to stronger demand and price growth outside of the capital.

To put that into perspective, there is still some way to go before it reaches the same ratio seen in the years before the global financial crisis, when the figure peaked at 70% in October 2005.

Knight Frank says the gap is likely to narrow further. Average London prices in June this year were 71% above their pre-global financial crisis peak in November 2007. For the whole of England and Wales, the figure was 46%, showing the greater scope for future growth.

The return of international buyers will temper this and Knight Frank expects price growth in prime central London to outperform the rest of the country in 2022.

Tom Bill, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, commented: “The pandemic has left its mark on the UK property market by magnifying existing trends rather than re-writing the rulebook. Things won’t pick up from where they left off in March 2020 but the wider trajectory will feel familiar.”

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