Over the last month, the Crawley property
market has seen some interesting movement in house prices, as property values
in the Crawley Borough Council area rose by 0.5% in the last month, to leave
annual price growth at 13.3%. These compare well to the national figures where
property prices across the UK saw a monthly uplift of 0.42%, meaning the annual
property values across the Country are 8.3% higher, this is all despite the constraining factors of Stamp
Duty changes in the spring and more recently our friend Brexit.
Looking at the
figures for the last 18 months makes even more fascinating reading, whereby
house prices are 19.6% higher, again thought provoking when compared to the national
average figure of 13.6% higher.
However, it gets more remarkable
when we look at how the different sectors of the Crawley market are performing.
Over the last 18 months, in the Crawley Borough Council area, the best
performing type of property was the semi, which outperformed the area average
by 1.43% whilst the worst performing type was the apartment, which
under-performed the area average by 1.26%.
Now the difference doesn’t sound
that much, but remember two things, this is only over eighteen months and the
gap of 2.69% (the difference between the semi at +1.43 and apartments at -1.26%)
converts into a few thousand pounds disparity, when you consider the average price
paid for a semi-detached property in Crawley itself over the last 12 months was
£322,700 and the average price paid for a Crawley apartment was £194,300 over
the same time frame.
I know all the Crawley landlords
and homeowners will want to know how each of the property types have performed,
so this is what has happened to property prices over the last 18 months in the area...
·
Overall
Average +19.6%
·
Detached
+19.4%
·
Semi
Detached +21.3%
·
Terraced +19.8%
·
Apartments
+18.1%
So what does all this
mean to Crawley homeowners and Crawley landlords and what does the future
hold?
When I looked
at the month-by-month figures for the area, you can quite clearly see there is a slight tempering of the Crawley property market over these
last few months. I have mentioned in previous articles that the number of
properties on the market in Crawley has increased this summer, something that
hasn’t happened since 2008. Greater choice for buyers means, using simple
supply and demand economics, that top prices won’t be achieved on every Crawley
property. You see, some of that growth in Crawley property values throughout
early 2016 may have come about because of a surge in house purchase activity,
an indirect result of the increase
in stamp duty on second homes from April, thus providing
a temporary boost to prices.
However, it may be possible the recent
pattern of robust employment growth, growing real earnings and low borrowing
costs will tilt the demand/supply seesaw in favour of sellers and exert upward
pressure on prices once again in the quarters ahead.
...And
Crawley property values, assuming that everything goes well with Brexit, I
believe in twelve months’ time we should see values in the order of 7% to 9%
higher.
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