The UK’s house price hotspots of 2023


Updated on 12 January 2024 | 0 Comments

Which towns saw the biggest jumps in asking prices last year?

2023 was a tricky year when it comes to house prices. Higher mortgage rates held back demand from potential buyers, and those lower activity levels pushed down house prices.

Rightmove for example found that at the end of the year average asking prices stood 1.1% lower than at the same point in 2022.

However, averages only tell you so much ‒ while there are some areas that have seen more pronounced drops, there are equally towns that have seen house prices grow significantly.

And nowhere has seen prices increase quite so sharply as Sandback in Dorset.

Here are the house price hotspots, according to Rightmove’s data, for 2023.

City

Average asking price 2023

Increase from average asking price in 2022

Sandbanks, Dorset

£1,909,943

20%

Hulme, Greater Manchester

£275,886

16%

South Moor, County Durham

£106,671

15%

Chobham, Surrey

£1,062,483

14%

Walsgrave, Warwickshire

£257,320

14%

Dunblane, Stirlingshire

£324,158

13%

Hockley, Birmingham

£255,121

13%

Stepps, Glasgow

£252,156

13%

Shotley Bridge, County Durham

£252,334

13%

Brotton, Cleveland

£174,837

13%


Sandbanks has long been an in-demand area, hence it’s enormous asking prices, but those have only grown higher over the last 12 months.

What’s really interesting about this table though is the spread in terms of both geography and the asking prices themselves.

We have town where prices are a smidge over £100,000, and areas costing almost £2 million, while they spread from the south coast to the north of England.

In other words, these house price hotspots can emerge almost anywhere across the country, and at any price point. 

Where homes sell fastest

The time taken to find a buyer can vary sharply by region.

While the average time to find a buyer in Great Britain stands at 66 days, things are much swifter north of the border.

According to Rightmove, the average time to find a buyer in Scotland is just 37 days, while Rosyth in Dunfermline, Fife is the fastest market of all.

Typical vendors take just 17 days to secure a sale.

Outside of Scotland, the fastest market was found to be Redfield in Bristol, where it took an average of 25 days to find a buyer.

The most searched-for locations

So which areas are most likely to be in demand from buyers?

Rightmove has data on that too, breaking down the locations most commonly searched for by both buyers and renters.

Let’s take a look:

Most searched-for buyer locations

 

Most searched-for renter locations

 

London

 

London

 

Cornwall

 

Manchester

 

Devon

 

Bristol

 

Glasgow

 

Glasgow

 

Bristol

 

Birmingham

 

Edinburgh

 

Liverpool

 

York

 

Leeds

 

Sheffield

 

Nottingham

 

Cambridge

 

Sheffield

 

Manchester

 

Cambridge

 

London once again took top place, with searches up by 1%, though notably searches for second-place Cornwall dropped by a sharp 18%.

What does the future hold?

For all of the difficulties last year held for the housing market, there’s no denying that things are a little more positive right now.

Mortgage rates have been dropping significantly, to the point that barely a day goes by without a big lender announcing rate cuts, making deals look a little more appealing. 

And that is feeding into growing demand from potential buyers.

Those same people who put their plans on hold when rates rose have been encouraged back into making a speculative offer.

In some cases that’s down to the discounts they can secure.

A study from Zoopla at the end of last year suggested that the average discount off the asking price that vendors were accepting in order to secure a deal had reached 5.5%, or £18,000 in cash terms.

But there’s also just a greater appetite to buy.

The facts around the housing market haven’t really changed ‒ we don’t build anywhere near enough homes to meet demand, and that doesn’t look like improving anytime soon.

As a result, as soon as mortgage rates become vaguely compelling, house prices are going to be driven up by the imbalance between supply and demand.

If mortgage rates continue to drop ‒ and the expectation is that they will, as Bank Base Rate is reduced on at least a couple of occasions this year ‒ then that is only going to further support increases in asking prices and sold prices too.

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