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Economic Development

North West and Midlands 'to overtake London for house price growth'

North West and two Midlands regions are expected to surpass London for cumulative house price growth since 2010, according to a new Hamptons forecast

A view of Manchester, as Hamptons expects the North West to overtake London in 2027 for cumulative percentage house price growth since 2010(Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

The Midlands and North West of England are set to surpass London in cumulative house price growth since the market's low point following the 2008 financial crisis, a new housing forecast suggests.

Nationally, property values are anticipated to register "modest" percentage increases next year, with Britain-wide growth of 2.5% annually by the fourth quarter of 2026, Hamptons predicts.

However, London's price growth is forecast to stagnate, showing a 0.0% annual change in the fourth quarter of 2026 as the capital absorbs recent tax modifications, the estate agency indicated.

Small price reductions are anticipated in the £1.9 million-plus bracket, though this is likely to be balanced by growth in the mainstream sector.

In the Budget, the Government unveiled a high-value council tax premium in England on properties exceeding £2 million, taking effect from April 2028.

Four price bands will apply, with the levy beginning at £2,500 annually for homes valued above £2 million, climbing to £7,500 for those worth over £5 million.

Premium country markets experienced robust price appreciation after the coronavirus outbreak, during the so-called "race for space".

Hamptons cautioned that properties beyond the £2 million threshold "could see around a 5% price correction, but this is expected to be a one-off adjustment rather than a prolonged decline, as markets absorb the change and stabilise". The findings stated: "Tax policy is increasingly acting as a levelling-up mechanism, limiting recovery in higher-value markets in London and the South."