New analysis from Zoopla shows that half of the UK’s 30m homes increased in value in 2024 as house prices returned to growth following a fall in house prices over 2023.
A total of 15m UK homes increased in value by 1% or more in 2024 – that’s up 42% from the 10.6m homes that increased in value over 2023. The average increase in value for homes posting price gains was £7,600, with 6.9m homes recording a price increase of £10,000 or more.
Whilst 2024 saw a broad recovery of house prices, a third (9.2m homes) still recorded a price decline of 1%or more, although this was still lower than the 12.8m homes that saw a decline in house prices in 2023. Just under 6m homes saw broadly static prices over the year changing by +/- 1%.
The portal claims that a clear north-south divide remains when it comes to the fortunes of homeowners in 2024 with fewer homes recording an increase in value in Southern England compared to the rest of Britain. This reflects the underlying affordability of homes and the impact of higher mortgage rates on buying power and house prices in areas with above-average home values.
Just 36% of homes increased in value by 1% or more across the regions in Southern England. Two-fifths of homes fell in value by an average of £8,700. This is in sharp contrast to the northern regions of England and Scotland where 63% of homes registered value gains over 2024.
Coastal towns in Kent and East Sussex were least likely to register price gains in 2024, with many towns seeing less than 10% of homes increase in value and more than three-quarters of homes registering small price falls. This is due to the fading of the pandemic boom and the subsequent search for additional space as more workers return to the office. An additional factor is the increase in second homeowners selling in the face of a doubling in council tax from April, which is impacting pricing across many coastal towns.
Housing is more affordable outside Southern England largely due to lower house prices in comparison to incomes, which creates more headroom for values to increase, despite higher borrowing costs. More than three in five homes increased in value over 2024 across the three regions of Northern England and Scotland
The North East is one of the most affordable regions and, as a result, seven in ten homeowners (820,000) in the region saw the value of their home increase by an average of £4,300 with one in five (270,000) homeowners seeing house price growth of £10,000 or more. Peterlee in County Durham saw the highest proportion of properties registering higher home values, with 83 per cent registering an increase by an average of £6,100.
The North West saw 63% of homes increasing in value by 1% or more, averaging £4,400, the highest average gain across all regions and countries of Great Britain. The Cheshire area registered the largest value gains, with six in ten homes in Congleton and Knutsford increasing in value by £10,000 or more.
In Scotland and Yorkshire and the Humber, six in 10 homes also gained value in 2024, with average increases of up to £19,300 (Biggar in Scotland), and £15,700 (Ripon in Yorkshire and the Humber).
Richard Donnell, executive director at Zoopla, comments: “The housing market returned to growth in 2024 but the pattern of home value changes across Britain is far from uniform. There is headroom for prices to increase in markets where housing is affordable compared to incomes which covers many parts of northern England and Scotland. In contrast, affordability is more of a constraint on price rises in Southern England where the market continues to adjust to higher borrowing costs. Faster income growth is helping to repair affordability supporting moving decisions in 2025.
“Every home has its own trajectory for price changes and millions of owners are tracking the value of their home on Zoopla as part of the decision of when to move home. The momentum from 2024 is spilling into 2025 with a seven-year high number of homes for sale. We expect more people to move home in 2025 than in 2024 despite uncertainty over the economic outlook and broadly static mortgage rates. “