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Home»UK Property»House prices growing fastest for small homes, Halifax finds
UK Property

House prices growing fastest for small homes, Halifax finds

April 28, 20245 Mins Read


Demand for homes on the lower rungs of the property ladder is driving house prices up, new research by Halifax has found.

The Bank’s findings, which have been based on its monthly House Price Index (HPI), showed UK prices had grown 1.9% (£5,318) year-on-year as of February 2024. But within the data, flats and terraced homes saw their value increase faster than semi-detached and detached homes.

Flats saw the biggest jump in average value, rising 2.7% (£4,290) to £163,016 compared to February 2023. Meanwhile, the slowest growth was recorded among semi-detached houses where average prices grew 1.7% (£4,797) to £295,199.

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It means the Covid-era ‘race for space’ may be coming to an end, Halifax suggested. The bank also pointed to the importance of first-time buyers (FTBs) to the market, with its analysis finding 53% of all property purchases involving a mortgage in 2023 were conducted by new entrants to the housing market – the highest proportion of FTBs since 1995. The majority of these buyers purchased flats and terraced houses.

The bank’s findings appear to contradict Rightmove’s HPI, which was published last week. While it also recorded annual growth in UK average asking prices, it said this was largely coming from demand at the top end of the housing ladder. However, it should be noted that Rightmove’s data covers early April, and is based on asking prices rather than prices at the mortgage agreement stage that Halifax deals with.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) also painted a different picture to Halifax’s, with its February data showing a fall in annual prices. However, the completed transactions it has recorded may have seen their prices agreed up to several months prior to February.

It all comes as mortgage rates have risen in recent days in response to market uncertainty over when the Bank of England will cut interest rates. Earlier this month, Nationwide directly blamed mortgage market chaos for worse-than-expected house price data.