Research from the national estate agent, Keller Williams UK, reveals the most expensive areas to buy a home across 18 major cities in England, and how much more they will cost you compared to the city wide average.
House prices have been hitting historic highs across England, soaring by more than 13% in the last year alone. The nationโs cities, however, have not experienced the same price boom that rural, regional areas of the country have and many cities now have average house prices well below the national average.
But all housing markets, urban or rural, have their expensive areas and Keller Williams has identified precisely where they are, thus showing exactly how much money homeowners will need to spend in order to live at the very top of their local market.
For buyers, London is the most expensive city in England. The average house price is currently ยฃ510,299, a sum that dwarfs the national average and yet pales in comparison to the capitalโs most expensive neighbourhoods. And none are more expensive than Knightsbridge and Belgravia where the average house price is a shade below ยฃ3 million: almost ยฃ2.5 million, or 478%, more than the London average.
In Birmingham, the average house price is ยฃ208,241. The cityโs most expensive ward is Sutton Four Oaks, located to the north-east of the city centre, where the average house price is ยฃ520,000. This makes Sutton Four Oaks 150% more expensive than the Birmingham average, a gulf that ranks second only to London.
There is a 148% difference between Bradfordโs average house price and that of its most expensive ward. The city average is ยฃ149,798, but in Ilkley, which is around 10 miles from the city centre, the average price is ยฃ372,500; a difference of ยฃ222,702.
Oxford has a high average house price, but ยฃ451,385 is still less than half of what it costs to live in its most expensive ward: North Oxford. The North of the city has an average house price of ยฃ543,615, 120% north of the city average.
In Newcastle, the average price is ยฃ172,770. In its most expensive ward, Gosforth, the average is 120% higher at ยฃ380,000.
There is 111% difference between Bournemouth and its most expensive ward, Canford Cliffs: 105% between Sheffield and Dore and Totley: 95% between Cambridge and Newnham: 86% between Bristol and Westbury-on-Trym and Henleaze: 81% between Leeds and Harewood: 74% between Manchester and Chorlton: 72% between Nottingham and Wollaton West: 61% between Liverpool and Mossley Hill: 49% between Southampton and Shirley: 48% between Sunderland and Washington East: 45% between Portsmouth and Drayton and Farlington:33% between Leicester and Knighton: and 28% between Plymouth and Plymstock Dunstone.
CEO of Keller Williams UK, Ben Taylor, commented:
โThe housing market has taken off and demand is pushing prices through the roof. Industry commentators keep predicting a sudden drop as demand lightens or at least evens out, but the truth is this is unlikely. The market will be as lively in a yearโs time as it is now.
But even if prices do drop slightly, these pinnacles of the UK property market will continue to command the highest house prices in their respective cities.
The reason many of these wards are so expensive is that they offer rarified properties – large, spacious houses with good gardens; or tranquil, luxurious corners of otherwise frantic metropolitan areas. There will always be demand for these types of homes, as well as buyers with money to buy them. Especially when you factor in the foreign investor interest that our cities attract.
If youโre lucky enough to be able to afford a step up into one of these wards, you can be sure that your financial stake will be well protected.โ





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