Home Property The nation’s priciest property postcodes revealed where homes sell for £8m on average

The nation’s priciest property postcodes revealed where homes sell for £8m on average

by LLP Finance Reporter
19th Jun 23 2:31 pm

The latest research by London lettings and estate agent, Benham and Reeves, has revealed which postcodes rank as the nation’s most prestigious pockets of the property market when it comes to the average value of bricks and mortar to have changed hands so far this year. 

Benham and Reeves analysed Land Registry records for every property to have sold since the start of January 2023, to find which postcodes have seen the highest average value of homes sold across England and Wales. 

You can see which postcode is the most valuable in each region of England and Wales here. 

The research shows that the W1K postcode of Westminster sits top of the table as the nation’s priciest so far in 2023. Since the start of the year, the average home sold in the postcode has gone for a staggering £8m.

Westminster also accounts for the joint second most expensive, with the SW1X postcode seeing homes sell for an average of £2.45m along with the City of London’s EC4V postcode. 

Camden’s WC2A postcode also ranks high with an average sold price of £2.1m so far this year and, in fact, London dominates the top 10 priciest postcodes in England and Wales. 

So what about outside of the M25

The priciest property postcode outside of London is currently the GU25 postcode in Runnymede where homes have commanded an average of £1.324m since the start of the year. 

The TQ8 postcode in South Hams has seen an average sold price of £1.3m with Cornwall’s PL28 ranking third, where the sold price sits at £1.225m.

Buckinghamshire’s HP8 (£1.2m), HP9 (£1.182m) and SL8 (£1.175m) also rank within the top 10, along with IG7 in Epping Forest (£1.097m), KT11 in Elmbridge (£1.035m), TN7 in Wealden (£962,500) and Guildford’s KT24 (£950,000).

Director of Benham and Reeves, Marc von Grundherr, said, “Much has been said about the London lethargic housing market performance since the start of the pandemic and the capital has certainly trailed other areas of the UK with respect to the rate of house price growth seen in recent years. 

However, it remains the most prestigious pocket of the market when it comes to the nation’s priciest postcodes and by quite some margin, even in cooler market conditions like those that we’ve seen so far this year. 

In fact, very few postcodes outside of the M25 can rival the might of London, but that’s not to say that there aren’t some very valuable postcodes dotted elsewhere around the nation.”

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