2021 Ends on a high note
House prices in the UK have ended the year of yet another record high.
The Nationwide says annual house price growth increased to 10.4 per cent in December from 10.0 in November, making 2021 the strongest calendar year for house price growth since 2006.
The price of a typical UK home hit a record high of £254,822, up nearly £24,000 over the year with Wales the strongest performing region over the year and London the weakest.
“Demand has remained strong in recent months, despite the end of the stamp duty holiday at the end of September. Mortgage approvals for house purchase have continued to run above pre-pandemic levels, despite the surge in activity seen earlier in the year. Indeed, in the first 11 months of 2021 the total number of property transactions was almost 30 per cent higher than the same period of 2019” explains Nationwide chief economist Robert Gardner.
Wales ended the year as the strongest performing region, with house prices up 15.8 per cent year-on-year.
Price growth remained elevated in Northern Ireland at 12.1 per cent, the strongest end to the year for that region since 2007.
Annual house price growth in Scotland was 10.1 while England saw a slight increase in annual price growth to 9.0 per cent from 8.5 per cent in the third quarter.
While there was a slowing in northern England (North, North West, Yorkshire & Humberside, East Midlands and West Midlands), annual price growth continued to exceed that in southern England (London, Outer Metropolitan, Outer South East, East Anglia and South West).
The South West was the strongest performing English region, with annual price growth of 11.5 per cent, the largest calendar year increase in the region since 2004.
London was again the weakest performer, with annual growth remaining at 4.2 per cent; London was the only UK region to see lower annual price growth in 2021 than in 2020, as shown in the table below.
The Northwest saw the strongest growth of the regions in northern England, with annual price growth of 11.2 per cent.