Exchanged property prices continue to rise, new data shows

Exchanged property prices have increased by an average of 3.8% over the course of the last year and 22% since 2019 – a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4% per annum, according to TwentyEA.

Fresh data from the the property data firm claims that the gap between the initial asking and exchanged prices is almost the same in 2023 as it was four years ago.

Four out of the 10 regions in England have achieved growth in exchanged prices of at least 5% this year compared with 2022, data shows.

The figures provided suggest the same trend in Northern Ireland and Scotland.

Northern Ireland saw the highest growth of exchanged prices at 8.4% while the South West, inner London, East of England, the North West, and Scotland all achieved more than 5%.

Every UK region saw gains of at least 3% except for Wales and the West Midlands. The latter saw the lowest exchanged price growth at 2.5%.

Growth in instruction prices year on year was also highest in Northern Ireland (7%) while the North West saw an increase of 5.7%, Scotland achieved 5.7% and Yorkshire and the Humber saw 5.1%.

On the average property, growth in the last year equates to £13,000, with £64,000 since 2019.

Overall, asking prices at original instruction have risen an average of 2.8% in the last year and 24% since 2019. This is a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.4% per annum.

Katy Billany, executive director of TwentyEA, said: “Despite the numerous gloomy headlines we’ve read over the last few months, instruction prices and exchanged prices have continued to rise across the UK with four out of the 10 regions in England all seeing growth in exchanged prices of 5% or more, a trend also evident in Scotland and Northern Ireland. This demonstrates the strength of buyer demand which is holding firm despite the backdrop of high inflation and rising interest rates.”

Meanwhile, the volume of ‘fallen throughs’ has reduced by more than 6% since March this year and is almost aligned with the pre-pandemic level seen in July 2019 – exactly four years ago while the ‘time to exchange’ has continued to fall month on month since February and dropped to 113 days in July.

Billany added: “Looking regionally at ‘fallen through’ volumes over the last year, only Scotland experienced an increase. Nationally, the lowest priced properties – those under £200,000 – are now significantly less likely to have a fall through than this time last year. It’s also very promising to see the ‘time to exchange’ continue to fall and we remain hopeful this continues.”

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