House prices rise by nearly 5% since last year as growth slows

House prices are around £10,000 higher on average than a year ago but the annual pace of growth is slowing, official figures show.
The average UK house cost £223k in June - around £10k more than 2016The average UK house cost £223k in June - around £10k more than 2016
The average UK house cost £223k in June - around £10k more than 2016

Average house prices across the UK increased by 4.9% in the year to June, down from 5% growth in the year to May, according to figures released jointly by the Office for National Statistics (ONS), Land Registry and other bodies.

The average price in Northern Ireland currently stands at £129,000, having increased by 4.4% over the previous year.

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Bucking the general upward trend, average house prices in the City of London have plunged by 20.3% over the past year - making it the weakest-performing local district in the UK for annual price growth in June.

The average house price in the City of London in June was £724,000.

The report said across the UK annual growth rate in house prices has slowed since mid-2016 but has remained broadly around 5% this year so far.

The ONS said the average UK house price was £223,000 in June - around £10,000 higher than in June 2016. Property values increased by 0.8% between May and June.

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England continues to be the main driver of house price growth, with prices there increasing by 5.2% over the year to June to reach £240,000 on average.

Wales saw house prices increase by 3.6% over the previous 12 months to stand at £152,000 on average.

In Scotland, the average price increased by 2.9% over the year to stand at £144,000.

Within England, the pace of price growth over the 12 months to June ranged from increases of 7.2% in the East of England and 7.1% in the East Midlands to, at the other end of the spectrum, 2.5% in the North East and 2.9% in London.

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The local authority showing the largest annual price growth in the year to June was Scotland’s Orkney Islands, where prices increased by 27.9% to stand at £148,000 on average.

But the report cautioned that low transaction numbers there and in some London boroughs - including the City of London - can cause volatility in the figures.

Jeremy Leaf, north London estate agent and former residential chairman of the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors (Rics), said: “What we are seeing on the ground is a determination to get on with property transactions even if that means negotiating harder to make sure they go through.”