Scotland and the North of England have seen the biggest rises in property values over the past decade, according to research from Halifax.
Six of the top 10 towns – and all of the top four – with the highest house price growth on a per square metre basis over the past 10 years are in Scotland. Peterhead has recorded the largest gain in average price per square metre over the past ten years: the Aberdeenshire town has seen an increase of 160 per cent to £1,254 per m² in 2011 from £481 per m² in 2001.
Inverurie, another Aberdeenshire town, has experienced the second largest gain in the UK (142 per cent) since 2001 followed by Montrose (135 per cent). The other four towns in the top ten are all in northern England.
The majority of towns that have seen the highest price growth over the past decade had relatively low prices in 2001. Strong economic growth over the decade as a whole has also helped to drive up prices in many of those areas that have seen substantial price gains. This is apparent in several towns in Aberdeenshire where the economy has been stimulated by the strong performance of the oil sector.
10 towns with the smallest rises since 2001 are all in Northern Ireland and southern England. House prices in Belfast (25 per cent) and Lisburn (31 per cent) have increased the least on a per square metre basis since 2001. Four of the ten towns with the smallest gains are in Northern Ireland with the remainder all in southern England. The majority of towns recording the smallest rises over the decade had relatively high prices in 2001.
The average price per square metre is currently higher than in 2007 in only 12 areas in the UK. Epping has seen the biggest rise over this period (12 per cent). The two best performers over the last decade as a whole have also seen increases since 2007: Peterhead (7 per cent) and Inverurie (10 per cent). There are five London boroughs amongst these 12 areas where prices are currently higher than in 2007, including Westminster (5 per cent) and Islington (4 per cent), reflecting the general outperformance of the London market compared with the rest of the country in the past two years.