Western Mail

Average house price in Wales hits record high of £233,361

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THE average house price in Wales has hit a record high of £233,361, despite high transactio­n levels beginning to ease off.

According to the latest Wales House Price Index from the Principali­ty Building Society, prices rose 3% in the first quarter of this year.

The Cardiff-headquarte­red mutual said that transactio­ns in the threemonth period are estimated to have been 4% lower than a year earlier – the second quarter in a row of lower sales.

Tom Denman, chief financial officer at Principali­ty Building Society, said: “Despite the strong headline performanc­e, the underlying data gives some support to the view that the market in Wales may be beginning to slow. With cost-of-living pressures mounting and consumer confidence falling, it is possible that demand within Wales is moderating.

“None of this should be taken to mean that the market is moving into recession, far from it, but there is a sense here of a slowing market.

“The question now is whether households will hold back either entering the housing market or trading up due to the current uncertain conditions.”

Five local authoritie­s – Blaenau Gwent, Carmarthen­shire, Ceredigion, Merthyr Tydfil and Pembrokesh­ire – all reported high price growth year on year of between 13 and 14%, while Monmouthsh­ire reported an annual price rise of 18.8% to £378,228. Monmouthsh­ire also had the highest quarterly price increase (14.3%) and was one of 14 local authoritie­s to report new peak house prices as of March.

Denbighshi­re was the only area to see a decrease in house prices annually, dropping by 5.9% to £197,452.

Prices dropped in Denbighshi­re over the quarter, too, by 4.1%, a pattern which has continued for several quarters since its peak price in June 2021. The so-called ‘race for space’ prompted by the pandemic has slowed, with a significan­t drop in sales of detached houses compared with a year earlier, down from 4,200 to 3,100.

The number of semis sold is also lower than a year ago, down 10%, while the sale of flats has risen sharply by 26%.

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