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What is the average house price in Wales

New quarterly figures from the Principality Building Society shows the average house price in Wales is up on a year earlier but down on the Q1

The Principality Building Society has published its latest Welsh house price index.(Image: PA)

The average house price in Wales is £238,098, shows new research from Principality Building Society.

Its latest Wales house price index, covering the second quarter (Q2) of the year, shows the average house price up 0.7% year-on-year (£236,369) and just 4.6% below its peak of £249,000 in 2022. On the previous quarter the average house price in Wales was down 0.1%.

Despite ongoing affordability pressures, the steady rise in the number of transactions – which reached over 10,000 in Q2 (up 13% on last year) – suggests growing buyer confidence despite persistent cost-of-living challenges and elevated rates.

Torfaen recorded the highest quarterly price change of any local authority at 14%, driven by high-value sales and limited housing supply. Carmarthenshire also reported an increase of 6.3%, while Flintshire saw a 3.3% quarterly rise.

Other areas, including Gwynedd, saw prices fall in the second quarter, dropping 7.3% from the first quarter of 2025. The Principality said the fall was likely influenced by policy shifts such as the Welsh Government’s adjustments to second home taxation and the impact of new planning regulations.

Principality Building Society’s research, based on HM Land Registry data, reveals that Q2 is the fourth consecutive quarter with more than 10,000 sales, suggesting property sales are showing signs of recovery.

Iain Mansfield, chief financial officer at Principality Building Society, said: "The housing market in Wales continued to stabilise in the second quarter of 2025, with prices holding broadly flat compared to the start of the year.

" Encouragingly, the steady increase in transaction volumes signals increasing confidence among buyers. While market conditions remain challenging, a downward trend in mortgage rates is helping to create a more favourable environment for buyers. This shift is contributing to a gradual uplift in consumer confidence as we move into the second half of 2025.”