North Tyneside house prices dropped slightly in July

File photo dated 14/10/14 of sold and for sale signs. A scramble by buyers to complete before the stamp duty holiday started winding down pushed UK house prices to a record high in June, official figures show. House prices rose by 13.2% over the year to June, faster than at any point since November 2004, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Issue date: Wednesday August 18, 2021.File photo dated 14/10/14 of sold and for sale signs. A scramble by buyers to complete before the stamp duty holiday started winding down pushed UK house prices to a record high in June, official figures show. House prices rose by 13.2% over the year to June, faster than at any point since November 2004, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Issue date: Wednesday August 18, 2021.
File photo dated 14/10/14 of sold and for sale signs. A scramble by buyers to complete before the stamp duty holiday started winding down pushed UK house prices to a record high in June, official figures show. House prices rose by 13.2% over the year to June, faster than at any point since November 2004, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS). Issue date: Wednesday August 18, 2021.
House prices dropped slightly, by 0.8%, in North Tyneside in July, new figures show.

House prices dropped slightly, by 0.8%, in North Tyneside in July, new figures show.

But the drop does not reverse the longer-term trend, which has seen property prices in the area achieve 7.2% annual growth.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The average North Tyneside house price in July was £176,767, Land Registry figures show – a 0.8% decrease on June.

Over the month, the picture was better than that across the North East, where prices decreased 3.5%, and North Tyneside outperformed the 3.7% drop for the UK as a whole.

Over the last year, the average sale price of property in North Tyneside rose by £12,000 – putting the area 11th among the North East’s 13 local authorities for annual growth.

The best annual growth in the region was in Darlington, where property prices increased on average by 16.4%, to £147,000. At the other end of the scale, properties in Gateshead gained 3.4% in value, giving an average price of £135,000.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Winners and Losers

Owners of terraced houses fared worst in North Tyneside in July – they dropped 1.1% in price, to £104,937 on average. But over the last year, prices rose by 7.8%.

Among other types of property:

Detached: down 1% monthly; up 9.6% annually; £324,137 averageSemi-detached: down 0.7% monthly; up 6.9% annually; £192,892 averageFlats: down 0.3% monthly; up 4.7% annually; £104,937 average

First steps on the property ladder

First-time buyers in North Tyneside spent an average of £150,400 on their property – £9,300 more than a year ago, and £17,800 more than in July 2016.

By comparison, former owner-occupiers paid £200,700 on average in July – 33.4% more than first-time buyers.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

How do property prices in North Tyneside compare?

Buyers paid 22% more than the average price in the North East (£145,000) in July for a property in North Tyneside. Across the North East, property prices are low compared to those across the UK, where the average cost £256,000.

The most expensive properties in the North East were in Northumberland – £180,000 on average, and 2% in North Tyneside. Northumberland properties cost 1.5 times as much as homes in Hartlepool (£117,000 average), at the other end of the scale.

The highest property prices across the UK were in Kensington and Chelsea, where the average July sale price of £1.3 million could buy 13 properties in Burnley (average £101,000).

Factfile

Average property price in July

North Tyneside: £176,767The North East:£144,935UK: £255,535

Annual growth to July

North Tyneside: +7.2%The North East: +10.8%UK: +8%

Best and worst annual growth in the North East

Darlington: +16.4%Gateshead: +3.4%