Barnet house prices increased more than London average in August
19 October, 2022 12:00 am
3 Min Read
Over the last year, the average sale price of property in Barnet rose by £52,000 By Katie Williams, Data Reporter
The highest annual growth in the region was in Harrow, where property prices increased on average by 15.9%, to £556,000
House prices increased by 1.3% – more than the average for London – in Barnet in August, new figures show.
The rise contributes to the longer-term trend, which has seen property prices in the area grow by 9.4% over the last year.
The average Barnet house price in August was £608,726, Land Registry figures show – a 1.3% increase on July.
Over the month, the picture was similar to that across London, where prices increased 0.9%, and Barnet was above the 0.9% rise for the UK as a whole.
Over the last year, the average sale price of property in Barnet rose by £52,000 – putting the area 13th among London’s 33 local authorities with price data for annual growth.
The highest annual growth in the region was in Harrow, where property prices increased on average by 15.9%, to £556,000. At the other end of the scale, properties in City of London lost 11.6% of their value, giving an average price of £810,000.
An imbalance between supply and demand for properties saw house prices climb across the UK throughout the pandemic.
But experts say expectations have changed significantly in recent weeks amid mortgage rate rises, with the likelihood of a dampening effect on house price growth.
According to figures from Moneyfacts.co.uk On Wednesday, the average two-year fixed-rate mortgage on the market has a rate of 6.52% and the average five-year fix is at 6.36%.
There are around 900 fewer mortgage products available than there were on the day of the mini-budget in September.
Chris Druce, senior research analyst at Knight Frank, said: “Current activity in the housing market is being shaped by mortgage status.
“Those that can are pushing on and securing deals ahead of further increases, while others have paused plans to digest events.
“With affordability set to be a growing barrier for many homebuyers in the coming months, we forecast house price growth will slow from here, with price falls in 2023.”
First steps on the property ladder
First-time buyers in Barnet spent an average of £496,000 on their property – £42,000 more than a year ago, and £56,000 more than in August 2017.
By comparison, former owner-occupiers paid £713,000 on average in August – 43.7% more than first-time buyers.
Property types
Owners of terraced houses saw the biggest rise in property prices in Barnet in August – they increased 1.6%, to £655,714 on average. Over the last year, prices rose by 11.6%.
Among other types of property:
Detached: up 0.5% monthly; up 8.4% annually; £1,496,721 average
Semi-detached: up 1.1% monthly; up 10% annually; £862,906 average
Flats: up 1.4% monthly; up 8.2% annually; £431,631 average
How do property prices in Barnet compare?
Buyers paid 10.1% more than the average price in London (£553,000) in August for a property in Barnet. Across London, property prices are higher than those across the UK, where the average cost £296,000.
The most expensive properties in London were in Kensington and Chelsea – £1.3 million on average, and 2.2 times as much as more than in Barnet. Kensington and Chelsea properties cost 3.8 times as much as homes in Barking and Dagenham (£354,000 average), at the other end of the scale.
The highest property prices across the UK were in Kensington and Chelsea.
Independent news outlets like ours – reporting for the community without rich backers – are under threat of closure, turning British towns into news deserts.
The audiences they serve know less, understand less, and can do less.
If our coverage has helped you understand our community a little bit better, please consider supporting us with a monthly, yearly or one-off donation.
Choose the news. Don’t lose the news.
Monthly direct debit
Annual direct debit
£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month. £50 annual supporters get a digital copy of each month's paper before anyone else. £84 annual supporters get a print copy by post and a digital copy of each month's before anyone else.