House price statistics for small areas in England and Wales: year ending December 2015

House prices and number of transactions for property sales in England and Wales, on an annual basis, updated quarterly.

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Cyswllt:
Email Nigel Henretty

Dyddiad y datganiad:
16 June 2016

Cyhoeddiad nesaf:
28 September 2016

1. Main points

In 2015, the median price paid for properties in the majority of small areas in England and Wales (58%) was over £175,000.

The most expensive 10 small areas of England and Wales in 2015 were in London, compared with 7 of the top 10 in 1995.

The median price paid in 2015 in the most expensive small area was £2,975,000, down from its 2014 peak of £3,500,000.

In 1995, 8 out of every 10 small areas in England and Wales had a median price paid between £25,000 and £75,000.

A case study is included to highlight how house price statistics for small areas can be used to understand new housing developments in small areas in England and Wales.

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2. Things you need to know

House Price Statistics for Small Areas (HPSSAs) use data from the Land Registry (LR) to provide statistics on the price paid and composition of residential property transactions on properties that were sold at full market value in England and Wales.

Residential property transactions can be added to or edited in the LR Price Paid Data retrospectively. This can cause changes to the number of sales and price statistics reported in the HPSSAs. For this reason, the entire series of data in the HPSSAs (back to year ending December 1995) is revised quarterly and these data supersede all previously published HPSSA data.

The smallest areas for which statistics are presented are middle layer super output areas (MSOAs), of which there are 7,201 in England and Wales. The largest area available is England and Wales overall. Statistics for MSOAs provide a more detailed geographic understanding of housing trends. It can be useful to view them in the context of the larger areas in which they sit, such as local authorities, regions and the country as a whole. More information about these statistics and their uses can be found in the HPSSAs Explained.

HPSSAs provide a different set of statistics to the new UK House Price Index (UK HPI). The UK HPI is a monthly release which reports mix-adjusted average house prices and house price indices for the UK, its constituent countries, the regions of England and local authority districts. The index is calculated using the LR Price Paid Data. The HPSSAs and the UK HPI follow similar trends, but the UK HPI is a mix-adjusted index, which means it is weighted to reflect the actual mix of properties sold in the previous year. Both the UK HPI and these HPSSAs include statistics showing average house prices for England and Wales, English regions and local authority districts, but the figures are not the same because of the different methods used to produce them.

The UK HPI is designed to reflect overall housing market values from the national to local authority level, while the HPSSAs report the non-adjusted average transactional values down to the small area level, and are therefore particularly useful when identifying the change in price for properties actually sold in a given period and area.

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3. House price rises in two thirds of small areas

Between year ending September 2015 and year ending December 2015 there were more middle layer super output areas (MSOAs) in England and Wales that had an increase in median price paid than had a decrease. Just over two-thirds of all MSOAs had an increase in median price paid for all property, while a little under one-third had a decrease. In year ending December 2015, the median price paid for properties in the majority of MSOAs (58%) was over £175,000.

The MSOA with the highest median price paid has reduced for the fourth consecutive quarter (Westminster 019) and had a median price paid of £2,975,000 in year ending December 2015. This is down from a peak of £3,500,000 in year ending December 2014. The MSOA with the lowest median price paid is within the Pendle local authority (Pendle 009) with a median price paid of £36,000. This is down from £37,500 in the previous quarter.

Map 1 shows the median price paid for MSOAs in England and Wales in year ending December 2015. Around 1 in 10 MSOAs had a median price paid of £400,000 or more and these are concentrated in London, the South East and East of England with only a few such areas in other regions. Of the 46 areas in the highest category – those with a median more than the £925,000 stamp duty threshold – 43 are in London.

The areas with the lowest median prices paid (below £95,000) are mainly concentrated in MSOAs within northern cities and within parts of South Wales.

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4. 20 years of house price change

The price paid for residential property in England and Wales has changed markedly over the last two decades. Figure 1 shows the number of areas in each £25,000 median house price range between 1995 and 2015.

In 1995 the range of median prices was relatively narrow. The cheapest middle layer super output areas (MSOA) was in Manchester, with a median price paid of £9,000, while the most expensive area was in Westminster at £315,000. At this time, over 8 out of every 10 MSOAs had a median price paid between £25,001 and £75,000.

In the decade between 1995 and 2005 the median price paid for properties rose rapidly in most areas and the overall range of median prices widened. In 2005, the most expensive area in the country (the same part of Westminster as in 1995) had a median price paid of over £1 million (£1,057,500) for the first time. The MSOA with the lowest median price paid in 2005 was in Redcar and Cleveland. The median price paid here in 2005 was £29,000, having dropped from £37,225 in 1995.

During the early 2000s there was a fall in the number of MSOAs in which the median price paid was a little over £250,000. This was most likely caused by property prices reaching the threshold for higher Stamp Duty Land Tax, payable on properties sold for £250,000 or more. This trend continued until the end of 2014, when a new stamp duty scheme was introduced. This new scheme made it more favourable to pay more than £250,000 for a property than in the previous stamp duty scheme.

In the last decade the range of median house prices continued to widen. Figure 1 shows large increases in the number of MSOAs which had a median price paid of more than £250,000, giving the chart a long “tail”. These MSOAs are predominantly in London and the South East of England. These increases in median price paid slowed temporarily during the most recent recession in 2008 and 2009.

In 2015 the most common price band for the median price paid was £125,000 to £150,000, with just under 12% of MSOAs falling into this price band.

Figure 1

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Figure 2 shows the 10 areas in which the median price paid for properties was highest in 1995, and compares this with 2015. The same MSOA, Westminster 019, had the highest median in both periods, having increased almost tenfold over the last 20 years. This area includes Hyde Park, Kensington Gardens and much of Knightsbridge.

In 1995, 3 of the most expensive 10 MSOAs were outside London (in Runnymede, South Bucks and Elmbridge), but in 2015 the most expensive 10 were all in London. Runnymede 005 fell from 7th most expensive in 1995 (£230,000) to 118th most expensive in 2015 (£706,000), despite the median price paid here tripling over the period. In Kensington and Chelsea 010 however, the median price paid for property rose from the 10th to the 3rd most expensive as it increased more than tenfold from £221,500 to £2,258,750.

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5. Identifying areas of housing development

The Land Registry (LR) Price Paid Data used to produce the House Price Statistics for Small Areas (HPSSAs) has good coverage of transactions which form part of larger housing developments. These data could therefore be used to identify middle layer super output areas (MSOAs) where large developments have been built.

The HPSSAs provide statistics on the number of newly built properties sold in MSOAs. If there are a high proportion of new build sales, compared to the number of sales of existing dwellings, then this is a sign that a large development has completed or has released a lot of new units. To explore this we have looked at a few areas with known large developments. Figures 3 and 4 show some data for one MSOA (Gosport 005) in Hampshire which had a large residential development in the early 2000s.

This area of Gosport includes areas of existing housing and the large Priddy’s Hard site where land use was changed from its historic military use to a predominantly residential new build area.

Figure 3 shows the number of sales of newly built properties as a percentage of all sales in Gosport 005, and for England and Wales overall between 1995 and 2015. In England and Wales, the percentage of sales for newly built properties was relatively stable over the last two decades, ranging from 7.9% to 13.5% of all sales. In Gosport 005, however, there were large fluctuations in the percentage of newly built property sales, which peaked in 2001 with 53% of all sales being for new properties. A second peak in 2006 reflects a second phase of development in this area.

Figure 4 shows the number of sales of both new and existing properties to give an idea of the scale of development taking place in Gosport 005. During the peak of the Priddy’s Hard development in 2001, 270 newly built properties were sold in the year. This was more than the number of sales of existing properties in 2001 (241).

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7. New for this release

This release includes around an additional 300,000 records of residential property transactions which were not included in previous House Price Statistics for Small Areas (HPSSA) releases. The records are from 1995 to 2012 and many (over 40%) are for transactions in London. Flats/maisonettes and terrace house types each account for over a third of the additional records. These additions have improved the accuracy of the historic HPSSA series in terms of both the price statistics presented and the number of sales data. The historic data included in this release supersedes all statistics presented in previous HPSSA releases.

The additional records are a one-off, following improved processing at the Land Registry, and so no more large additions of this type are anticipated. In future, only small changes will still be made as a result of errors or omissions notified to the Land Registry by users of the data.

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8. Quality and methodology

For more information about the quality and methods used to produce these statistics, see our Quality and Methodology Information document.

Details of the policy governing the release of new data are available in the UK Statistics Authority’s Code of Practice or from the Media Relations Office: media.relations@ons.gov.uk

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Manylion cyswllt ar gyfer y Bwletin ystadegol

Nigel Henretty
better.info@ons.gov.uk 
Ffôn: +44 (0)1329 447934