County Armagh is the top performing UK county

houseline61.jpgThe best performing county in terms of house price growth over the past ten years is County Armagh according to the annual Halifax County House Price Survey of the UK.

The survey found that not only was County Armagh the county with the fastest house price growth in the UK over the past ten years, but also that five of the ten counties that have delivered the highest house price growth over the past ten years are in Northern Ireland.

Halifaxsaid prices across Northern Ireland have been driven up sharply over the last few years by a combination of a strong local economy, high levels of immigration and high demand for properties from second homebuyers and buy-to-let investors in the Republic of Ireland. Northern Ireland was the most expensive region in the UK outside London and the South East at the end of 2007. Two years ago, only Scotland had a lower average price than Northern Ireland.

The best performers after County Armagh over the past ten years are County Tyrone (315%), County Antrim (293%), Carmarthenshire (287%) and County Down (281%).

More than four in ten counties – 44 out of a total of 104 – have seen at least a trebling in average prices over the past decade. All counties have recorded at least a doubling in their average house price. North Lanarkshire is the only county that recorded an average price rise of less than 150% with a 149% increase.

Expense
Surrey is the most expensive county in the UK with an average house price of £364,115. Twelve counties have an average house price in excess of £250,000. All of these counties are in the south of England except for County Down in Northern Ireland. Ten years ago, no county had an average price above £250,000.

Least Expensive
Blaenau Gwent is the least expensive county in the UK with an average house price of £113,964 in December 2007. Twenty counties (19%) now have an average house price below £150,000. Ten years ago all counties (100%) had an average price below £150,000.

Five of the ten least expensive counties in the UK in 2007 are in Scotland. Four are in Wales and one in the Yorkshire & the Humber (South Humberside). In 1997, seven of the least expensive areas were in Wales, two in Scotland and one in Northern Ireland.

Six of the ten least expensive counties in 2007 were also in the ten least expensive counties in 1997. North Ayrshire, North Lanarkshire, West Dunbartonshire and South Humberside have entered the list of ten least expensive counties over the past decade. County Tyrone, Caerphilly, Carmarthenshire and Gwynedd no longer feature among the ten least expensive counties.

Commenting, Martin Ellis, Halifax chief economist, said: “The counties recording the best house price performance over the past ten years have mainly been outside southern England. Four of the five counties with the highest house price growth are in Northern Ireland reflecting the strength of the housing market there over the past few years.

All counties in the UK have seen at least a doubling in prices since 1997. Prices in more than four in ten counties trebled or more.. There are now only 20 counties in the UK with an average house price below £150,000; ten years ago, every county was below the threshold.”

County Region

Average House Price (1997)*

Average House Price (2007)*

10 yr % change

County Antrim Northern Ireland

57,947

227,600

293%

County Tyrone Northern Ireland

49,853

206,887

315%

Carmarthenshire Wales

44,447

172,223

287%

County Down Northern Ireland

66,542

253,734

281%

Isle of Anglesey Wales

50,270

185,591

269%

Cornwall South West

63,482

232,569

266%

Wrexham Wales

51,329

185,939

262%

County Londonderry Northern Ireland

56,120

201,568

259%

Isle of White South East

58,085

200,648

245%

Gwynedd Wales

48,657

167,520

244%

East Sussex South East

76,329

262,048

243%

Rhondda, Cynon, Taff Wales

40,703

138,059

239%

Devon South West

65,151

220,271

238%

Pembrokeshire Wales

53,514

180,169

237%

Ceredigion Wales

54,608

183,678

236%

Avon South West

70,876

237,037

234%

Herefordshire West Midlands

67,884

227,007

234%

Somerset South West

67,566

220,773

227%

Gloucestershire South West

74,542

242,580

225%

Suffolk East Anglia

68,681

220,290

221%

Highland Scotland

53,991

173,081

221%

Oxfordshire South East

98,540

315,894

221%

Flintshire Wales

58,505

187,340

220%

Conwy Wales

55,070

175,673

219%

Northumberland North

55,844

176,659

216%

Norfolk East Anglia

60,658

190,866

215%

Powys Wales

60,384

189,307

214%

North Yorkshire Yorkshire and the Humber

71,256

223,077

213%

Blaenau Gwent Wales

36,658

113,964

211%

Dorset South West

80,889

250,972

210%

Tyne and Wear North

51,417

159,531

210%

Monmouthshire Wales

73,883

229,034

210%

Caerphilly Wales

46,361

143,032

209%

West Sussex South East

91,662

282,480

208%

Shropshire West Midlands

67,665

208,395

208%

Kent South East

85,476

262,054

207%

Merthyr Tydfil Wales

39,321

120,353

206%

Essex South East

82,349

250,199

204%

Neath Port Talbot Wales

45,525

138,041

203%

Edinburgh, City of Scotland

75,664

228,051

201%

Lincolnshire East Midlands

56,236

169,284

201%

Cambridgeshire East Anglia

71,069

213,659

201%

Bedfordshire South East

74,574

223,353

200%

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