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UK Housing Market Stagnates with Zero Growth and Falling Prices

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UK Housing Market Stagnates with Zero Growth and Falling Prices
UK Housing MarketStagnationZero Growth

The UK housing market has not grown and house prices have instead fallen across England. This stagnant and falling price trend has left homeowners feeling as though they are living in Groundhog Day.

The UK housing market has stagnated with zero growth across the property landscape and with prices instead falling across England. Brits looking to sell their homes might feel as though they are living in Groundhog Day - and they wouldn't be wrong as fresh data from the House Price Index report revealed that a property is roughly worth the same today as it was a year ago.

It projected a non-existent zero per cent growth in the sector where the average house price remains static at £268,000. The annual growth recorded for March 2026 also gave a grim prediction suggesting that, amid continued strain on the global economy from the Middle East crisis, the market's resilience to international pressures may be starting to wane.

Meanwhile, monthly house values have also taken a tumble, with the average price tag in March falling 0.4 per cent from February. Previously strong-performing English regions, such as the North East and North West, have seen prices drop.

Last month's House Price Index report - covering February - showed homeowners in the North West and the North East had enjoyed price rises over the past year of 3.4 per cent and 3.6 per cent, respectively However, both regions recorded losses for March, with North East prices plunging 1.2 per cent to an average of £161,629, while North West prices fell 0.8 per cent to around £214,678. Pictured: A detached home in Mid Sussex.

Homes in this area of South East England saw their value rise by over £17,400 Pictured: A property in Bishop's Stortford. Despite the dismal picture, pockets of the UK bucked the trend, and saw price increases particularly in the Home Counties and commuter towns around the capital - as Londoners attempt to escape to the country Pictured: A six-bedroom property in Oxford.

Properties in the Vale of White Horse, in Oxfordshire, are worth roughly £413,205 following a £19,916 annual price bump The analysis from the estate agents Purplebricks brought more bad news for London and the South of England with the value of homes in the UK capital falling by 2.1 per cent, whereas values dropped 0.8 per cent in the South East and South West. Properties in the South East now average £378,515 while homes in the South West are worth around £300,849.

Average house prices across England saw an annual price drop of 0.6 per cent, putting the average property at £289,946. Read More Norwich is named best place to live in the UK in new guide - but did your home town make the top 10? Scotland and Wales are the exceptions to the trend across England, with prices rising 1.6 per cent and 2.9 per cent respectively, according to the data released by the Office for National Statistics.

The average Scottish property will now set a buyer back £186,582 while the average Welsh home comes with a price tag of £213,240. Despite the dismal picture, pockets of the UK bucked the trend, particularly in the Home Counties and commuter towns around the capital - as Londoners attempt to escape to the country. East Hertfordshire homes now average £456,251 after a £21,738 price boost over the 12 months to March this year.

Properties in the Vale of White Horse, in Oxfordshire, are worth roughly £413,205 following a £19,916 annual price bump. And, in Mid Sussex, homes are today worth £189,542 after a £17,473 rise. London suffered significant losses over the year, with only eight of the 32 boroughs seeing positive price performances.

The top-performing borough was Waltham Forest, where homes average £528,353 following an annual £16,304 rise – some £10,000 more than second place Bexley where homes cost £410,445 following a £6,897 increase. Bottom of the list was the City of London where homes recorded yet another six-figure plunge worth £151,016, making the average property now worth £594,961 - around £50,000 above the London average of £542,065.

Homes in Westminster were also hammered with a six-figure loss, with £107,111 wiped off prices making average homes worth £844,095. Meanwhile, properties in Kensington and Chelsea took a battering too, shedding £101,277 over the year, pricing the average home at £1.26 million. Tom Evans, Sales Director at Purplebricks Estate Agency, said: 'While this isn't the outcome homeowners wanted, a slow-down in house prices is not surprising - but we are confident this is a blip rather than a trend.

'The economy's unexpected 0.6 per cent growth for the first quarter of 2026, and with lenders continuing to cut fixed-rate mortgage deals, we're confident the long-term outlook is a positive one. 'Despite Labour bigwigs battling over who will be in No 10, as far as homeowners should be concerned, things can only get better. '

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UK Housing Market Stagnation Zero Growth Falling Prices House Price Index Report Property Values Average House Price North East North West North West Prices House Price Index (HPI) Report North East Prices South West South East

 

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