- Hull, Middlesbrough, Kilmarnock and Birkenhead all have more than 90% of properties listed for sale below UK average house price of £217, 502*
- Outside of London, least affordable areas include Brighton, Bath, Guildford, Tunbridge Wells and Crawley where less than 10% of properties for sale are below the UK average house price
- 57% of properties for sale in Grimsby are less than £100,000
London, 27 April 2017 — Kingston-upon-Hull is the most affordable city in Britain with 92% (91.9%) of properties currently for sale at prices less than the UK’s average house price, according to research by online estate agents HouseSimple.com
Only three other towns (with more than 150 properties listed for sale) have more than 90% of properties for sale, at asking prices below the UK average. They are Birkenhead (91.8%), Kilmarnock (91.8%) and Middlesbrough (90.2%).
The following table shows the most affordable UK towns and cities ranked in order of the number of properties for sale that are below the average house price in the UK:
Town/City |
Region |
Total no. properties for sale |
No. of properties below £100k |
% below £100k |
No. of properties below UK average* |
% below average house price |
Hull |
Yorkshire |
1063 |
530 |
50.0% |
977 |
91.9% |
Birkenhead |
North West |
268 |
147 |
54.9% |
246 |
91.8% |
Kilmarnock |
Scotland |
202 |
106 |
54.6% |
182 |
90.1% |
Middlesbrough |
North East |
662 |
320 |
48.3% |
596 |
90.0% |
Burnley |
North West |
589 |
291 |
49.4% |
524 |
89.0% |
Grimsby |
Yorkshire |
295 |
169 |
57.3% |
261 |
88.5% |
Bradford |
Yorkshire |
1383 |
625 |
45.2% |
1220 |
88.2% |
Wigan |
North West |
437 |
159 |
36.4% |
384 |
87.9% |
Neath |
Wales |
754 |
318 |
42.2% |
656 |
87.0% |
Blackpool |
North West |
1328 |
515 |
38.8% |
1155 |
87.0% |
Stoke |
W Midlands |
1327 |
583 |
43.9% |
1144 |
86.2% |
Sunderland |
North East |
622 |
312 |
50.2% |
530 |
85.2% |
Merthyr Tydfil |
Wales |
256 |
146 |
57.0% |
216 |
84.4% |
Darlington |
North East |
488 |
239 |
40.0% |
410 |
84.0% |
Doncaster |
Yorkshire |
857 |
306 |
35.7% |
720 |
84.0% |
Scunthorpe |
Yorkshire |
335 |
111 |
33.1% |
281 |
83.9% |
At the other end of the affordability chart, London, not surprisingly, is the least affordable city in the UK. But there are five other locations where under 10% of properties currently for sale are listed at less than the average UK house price. In Bath, just 6.8% of properties being marketed are priced lower than the UK average.
The following table shows the least affordable UK towns and cities ranked in order of the number of properties for sale that are below the average house price in the UK:
Town/City |
Region |
Total no. properties for sale |
No. of properties below £100k |
% below £100k |
No. of properties below UK average* |
% below average house price |
London |
London |
25000+ |
151 |
0.6% |
1037 |
4.2% |
Bath |
South West |
381 |
5 |
1.3% |
26 |
6.8% |
Guildford |
South East |
271 |
1 |
0.4% |
19 |
7.0% |
Crawley |
South East |
362 |
1 |
0.3% |
32 |
8.8% |
Tunbridge Wells |
South East |
299 |
3 |
1.0% |
27 |
9.0% |
Brighton |
South East |
632 |
4 |
0.6% |
60 |
9.5% |
Alex Gosling, CEO of online estate agents HouseSimple.com comments: “The lack of affordable properties in the UK has become a recurring theme as house prices have continued to rise. So, it will probably come as a surprise to many people, that there are still major towns and cities where almost every property for sale is below the UK average house price.
“Average salaries in these areas may still restrict people from buying a property but at least there’s a pool of properties that someone with a small deposit could afford. And towns such as Hull and Grimsby offer hope to the many first-time buyers trying to climb on the property ladder, with more than half of the current stock on the market below £100,000.
“The picture is very different in the south of England and Bath and Brighton are classic examples. Both are extremely popular cities, particularly for Londoners wanting to move out and enjoy a better quality of life. But prices have rocketed as a result and moved away from many buyers. Less than 10% of properties in these cities are below the average UK property price, and properties under £100k are almost extinct. First-time buyers, unless they have help from parents, are facing the prospect of holding off buying until well into their 30s, if at all.”
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