Monday, 16 February 2015

London property prices rise 12.3% and Leigh on sea is booming



The price of an average UK home rose to £250,000 by last December, tipping many properties into the three per cent stamp duty bracket. before the new stamp duty changes.
The Office for National Statistics (ONS) said house prices in December were up 5.5 per cent compared with a year earlier, partly because of a 12.3 per cent increase in London.
The market may be hotting up in the capital but Essex too is seeing a boom according to  new figures from Castle estate agents Group which has six regional offices in the county. Their research showed that key Essex locations are seeing significant property price inflation.
In Leigh on sea, prices have risen by 12 per cent; Benfleet is also up by 11 per cent; and Southend is 13 per cent  is up, six per cent over the  last 12 months. According to the Nationwide House Price Index, prices across Essex as a whole are up by 8 per cent year on year.
There has been a surge of lower end properties on the market over the last six weeks, as rising prices have taken many home owners out of negative equity says Robert Butterworth, castle estate agents MD: ‘We have seen a huge increase in the number of cheaper properties like starter and small family homes coming on the market, since the start of the year.
When home owners bought properties at their peak in 2007, they soon found that their properties dropped in value as the recession kicked in and demand fell away.
With prices on the up, many home owners are finding they can trade up and the growth of first-time buyers is also fuelling demand.
First time buyer numbers are at their highest levels for over five years, following initiatives such as Funding for Lending and Help to Buy, which have widened access to mortgages and allowed some people who were previously trapped in renting to break free.
Many agents are concerned over what could happen when interest rates rise.

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