Tag Archives: homes
Homes in England near top state schools sell at large premium, new study shows
Homes near England’s top state schools have an average price of £344,466 and parents face paying over £40,000 more to buy a home in their catchment areas, new research has found. Homes near Beaconsfield High School in Buckinghamshire have the highest premium of £636,132 or 186% compared to the average house price in neighbouring areas, according to the study from Lloyds Bank. Regionally the largest premium paid to live near the best state schools is in the North West, with discounts seen around schools in the East Midlands and the South West. Overall in 2015, house prices in the postal districts of the top 30 state schools in England, defined as those secondary schools that achieved the best GCSE results in 2014, were on average £40,728 or 13% higher than the neighbouring locations in their counties. House prices in the postal district of The Henrietta Barnett School in Barnet had a premium of £418,860 or 76%, the second highest, followed by St. Olave's and St. Saviour's Grammar School in Orpington with a premium of £180,447 and the Tiffin schools in Kingston upon Thames with a premium of £137,665. But over half, some 16, of England's top 30 state schools are in locations with an average property price below their neighbouring areas’ average. Properties in the postal district of Aylesbury High School, for example, sell at £122,506 or 36% less than the county average of £342,166. The next largest price discounts in cash terms at 119,485 are in Reading, where Reading School and Kendrick School are located. These schools are followed by Queen Elizabeth's School, Barnet at £95,681 and Westcliff High School for Boys Academy in Essex at £58,970. ‘In general, homes close to the nation's top performing state schools command a significant premium over neighbouring areas,’ said Andrew Mason, Lloyds Bank mortgages director . ‘The presence of a top performing state school appears to help support property values in many of these locations as parents compete with other buyers to land the property that gives their child the best possible chance to attend their chosen school,’ he added. The North West has the largest premium with average house prices in the postal districts of the top ten state schools in the region selling at £66,398 or 39% above the average house price in their county. This is followed by East Anglia at £48,642 or 20% and the South East at £45,871 or 15%. In contrast, homes in the East Midlands and the South West that are close to the best performing state schools are, on average, around £6,600 or 3% lower than in neighbouring locations. The average house price of £344,466 in the postal districts of the 30 best performing state schools is 9.2 times average gross annual earnings. This is significantly higher than the average across England at £267,956 or 7.7 times average gross annual earnings. The least affordable homes are those with a typical property price of £971,882 within the postal district of The… Continue reading
New home sales dip down in Australia, latest data shows
Seasonally adjust new home sales in Australia were down marginally by 0.4% in July but the market overall is in strong shape, the latest report from the Housing Industry Association shows. This is because overall new home sales are at historically high levels, according to HIA chief economist Harley Dale. ‘It appears that the cyclical peak for total new home sales occurred in April, but the subsequent downward trend is very mild,’ he said. But he explained that key leading indicators of home building, including HIA new home sales, suggest little prospect for further growth in new home construction in the 2015/2016 financial year. ‘However, following three consecutive years of strong growth which has propped up the domestic economy considerably, both HIA new home sales and ABS building Approvals signal another healthy year for new home construction,’ he added. Indeed, the data shows that detached house sales increased by 0.7% in July this year but the annual peak for detached house sales has passed. Over the three months to July this year detached house sales fell by 2.8% and are 3.4% lower when compared to the three months to July 2014. Multi-unit sales peaked in May this year and fell by 4.2% in July following a decline of 2.9% in June. Over the three months to July this year multi-unit sales increased by 8.3% but it was the strength of the May result that drove the quarterly outcome. A breakdown of the latest data shows that in the month of July 2015 detached house sales increased by 4.2% in New South Wales but fell by 2.3% in Victoria and by 4.9% per cent in Western Australia. Sales were close to flat for the month in Queensland with a marginal fall of 0.6% and South Australia they were down by just 0.2%. Continue reading
New home building in the UK up by 15% year on year
There were over 131,000 new homes completed in the UK in the last 12 months, some 15% higher than in the previous year and the highest annual total since June 2009, the latest figures shows. Housing Minister Brandon Lewis welcomed the figures but promised that the rate of new building would keep rising to meet the government’s target of 275,000 per year by 2020 which he said would represent the fastest rate of building for 20 years. ‘This has provided a real boost to the UK’s construction industry and is delivering the homes that hard-working people rightly deserve. However, we know there is more to do,’ he said. Part of that will be to boost the number of starter homes for first time buyers and he pointed out that some £10 million has been made available to bring forward brownfield sites to build new home which will be available to young first time buyers at a 20% discount. The latest figures from the Office of National Statistics have shown that output in the construction industry increased by 2.7% in June compared to the same month last year. Work on private new housing between April and June rose by nearly 3.9% on the previous quarter. Lewis said that the government has also given local people the powers they need to drive forward housing development with the number of homes in locally led plans up by a quarter. Before March 2012 the average number of homes planned for by local authorities stood at 573 per year. But he explained that radical reforms put Local Plans and housing delivery at the heart of the planning system and this has helped expand the housing pipeline with those Local Plans published after the reforms containing on average 717 homes per year. Continue reading