House prices in London's royal boroughs see 10% decline over the last five years

Despite property in the capital's royal boroughs continuing to command a healthy price premium in the current sluggish London market, the gap is narrowing as they trail the rest of the capital in terms of house price appreciation.

Related topics:  Property
Property Reporter
23rd September 2021
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Research by London lettings and estate agent, Benham and Reeves, analysed house price data across London’s three royal boroughs, Kensington and Chelsea, Kingston and Greenwich and how they have performed over the last five years.

The research shows that the current average cost of purchasing a property in a royal borough is £705,709, a 32.4% property price premium when compared to the average cost of £533,060 across the rest of the London market.

However, while a royal title may command a higher price, this premium has reduced by 9.9% in the last five years as house price growth across royal boroughs has stuttered.

Over the last five years, the average house price across London’s three royal boroughs has fallen by -1.4% - an average annual decline of -0.1% per year.

This has been largely driven by Kensington and Chelsea where values have dropped -5.7%. Across Kingston and Greenwich house prices have shown positive movement since 2016 at 3.9% and 6.3% respectively.

However, both trail the overall London average (1.3%) and remain some way off the pace of 15% to 20% set by the top five best performing boroughs.

Across the London boroughs that don’t hold a royal title, house prices have climbed by 5.9% since 2016 - an average increase of 1.2% per year.

Waltham Forest tops the table with an average annual increase of 20.7%, while Bexley (17.2%), Havering (15.4%), Redbridge (15.3%) and Barking and Dagenham (15.2%) have also seen house prices increase by more than 15% in the last five years.

Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, commented: “London’s royal boroughs naturally command a house price premium and while this has reduced over the last five years, a property within a royal borough will still set you back 32% more on average.

But that doesn’t make them unobtainable for the average London homebuyer. In fact, while Kensington and Chelsea may take the crown as London’s most expensive pocket of the property market, the average cost of buying in Greenwich actually comes in below the wider London average.

So while securing a royal title for yourself is highly unlikely, buyers at all rungs of the London property ladder can at least claim one for their property if they should so wish.”

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