Kensington & Chelsea is Britain's most expensive area to buy

New research from Halifax shows that areas in London and the South East are continuing to dominate the country's list of most expensive places for property on a per square metre basis.

Related topics:  Mortgages
Amy Loddington
30th June 2014
Mortgages

It is also largely those London boroughs with the most expensive property that have seen the sharpest price rises over the past five years.

There are, however, pockets outside Southern England where property fetches a high price per square metre, including Altrincham, Edinburgh, Solihull, and Leamington Spa in Warwickshire.

Kensington & Chelsea is Britain's most expensive area with an average price of £10,854 per square metre and also has the highest average house price in Great Britain (£857,225).  Eleven London boroughs have an average price in excess of £5,000 per square metre. The top 20 most expensive areas in Britain are all London boroughs and the 48 most expensive are all in London and the South East.

Altrincham is the most expensive town on a per square metre basis outside southern England with an average price of £2,227 per m2. This is followed by Edinburgh (£2,214). Solihull (£2,189), and Leamington Spa in the West Midlands (£2,144).

Stanley in County Durhamin the North has the lowest average price (£818 per m²) of all the towns surveyed in Great Britain. The average price per square metre in Kensington & Chelsea is more than thirteen times that in Stanley.

All ten of the towns with the lowest prices per square metre are outside the south of England. Five of the towns with the lowest average price per square metre are in Scotland, they include Wishaw (£925), Lanark (£957), Greenock (£976), Airdrie (982) and Kilmarnock (£986).

The ten areas recording the highest house price growth on a per square metre (m2) basis over the last five years are all London boroughs. Lambeth (61%) recorded the biggest increase over the five year period. The country's most expensive area, Kensington and Chelsea, has also recorded the second biggest price rise (56%). Eight of the most expensive areas in Britain also feature amongst the ten areas recording the highest house price increases since 2009.

Nationally, house prices per square metre have risen by 13% since 2009. Greater London has experienced significantly faster growth (34%) than elsewhere with South East (13%) recording the next biggest increase. In contrast, the North (-3%) and Scotland (-5%) have seen prices per square metre fall since 2009.

Craig McKinlay, Mortgages Director, Halifax, said:

"House price per square metre is a useful measure for house price comparison because it helps to adjust for differences in the size and type of properties between locations.

“While there are areas in central London that are more expensive than anywhere else in the country, there are notable pockets outside the South East where property also has a high price per square metre. Many of those areas experiencing the strongest increases over the past few years are those with the highest price per square metre."

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