Western Mail

Average house prices in Wales set new records

- CHRIS PYKE Business reporter chris.pyke@walesonlin­e.co.uk

AVERAGE house prices in Wales are continuing to set new records. THE average house price in Wales has reached £212,751 in Q1 2021 (January – March), with annual house price inflation climbing to 10.1%, the first double-digit percentage increase since 2005.

The figures have been released from Principali­ty Building Society’s Wales House Price Index for Q1 2021, which demonstrat­es the rise and fall in house prices in each of the 22 local authoritie­s in Wales.

Lockdown-inspired changes in housing demand and government policy interventi­ons around Land Transactio­n Tax (LTT) have helped to boost prices and activity, with sales up by 40% on the same period in 2020.

Every local authority in Wales has reported a rise in house prices in the first quarter of 2021 when compared annually to Q1 2020.

Across Wales, prices of detached, semi-detached and terraced homes are 10% or more higher than the same time in 2020, but flat prices continue to languish.

Tom Denman, chief financial officer at Principali­ty Building Society, said: “The bounce back of the housing market during the pandemic has been stronger than some had anticipate­d, and if that momentum is maintained, it may be that the strong housing market recovery will continue through the rest of the year and into 2022.

“Pent-up demand due to a shortage of houses on the market, continuing low interest rates, wage growth for those in work, plus the incentive of the Land Transactio­n Tax, has led to this new record peak of average house prices.

“Looking further forward this growth could be impacted by the end of the LTT holiday and the furlough scheme, but much will depend on the overall recovery on the economy.”

Estimated sales in Q1 were up 40% on the same period last year, albeit with a clear demarcatio­n between house and flat sales.

According to monthly data from

HMRC, there were 3,880 sales in January, 4,610 in February and 8,170 in March – clear evidence of the incentive effects of the Land Transactio­n Tax holiday.

Eight local authoritie­s saw new record highs during Q1, in Bridgend (£191,810), Cardiff (£269,826), Carmarthen­shire (£196,422), Denbighshi­re (£201,091), Newport (£228,876), Swansea (£213,819), Vale of Glamorgan (£303,807), and Wrexham (£198,944).

House prices rose at the fastest rate in Swansea, with an annual increase of 16.1%. Anglesey (14.6%), Vale of Glamorgan (14.6%), and

Carmarthen­shire (14.2%) followed closely behind, highlighti­ng the Covid-induced “race for space” with these being popular choices for city dwellers from Wales or England.

However, it was a mixed picture in terms of quarterly performanc­e, with prices lower in seven local authority areas - the sharpest falls being seen in Monmouthsh­ire (down 5.8%), Conwy (down 4.5%) and Gwynedd/Neath Port Talbot (both down 3.5%), albeit in all cases on the back of record prices in the previous quarter.

 ??  ?? > House prices are still rising across Wales
> House prices are still rising across Wales

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