Accredited official statistics

UK House Price Index summary: July 2024

Published 18 September 2024

1. Headline statistics for July 2024

The average price of a property in the UK was £290,000

The annual price change for a property in the UK was 2.2%

The monthly price change for a property in the UK was 0.6%

The monthly index figure (January 2015 = 100) for the UK was 152.0

Estimates for the most recent months are provisional and are likely to be updated as more data is incorporated into the index. Read Revisions to the UK HPI data.

Next publication of UK HPI

The August 2024 UK HPI will be published at 9.30am on Wednesday 16 October 2024. See the calendar of release dates for more information.

2. Economic statement

Average UK house price annual inflation was 2.2% (provisional estimate) in the 12 months to July 2024, down from the revised estimate of 2.7% in the 12 months to June 2024.

The average UK house price was £290,000 in July 2024 (provisional estimate), which is £6,000 higher than 12 months ago. Average house prices in the 12 months to July 2024 increased in England to £306,000 (1.6%), increased in Wales to £218,000 (2.0%) and increased in Scotland to £199,000 (6.0%). The average house price increased in the year to Q2 (Apr to Jun) 2024 to £185,000 in Northern Ireland (6.4%).

On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, average UK house prices increased more slowly between June 2024 and July 2024 (0.6%) than in the same period 12 months ago (1.1%). On a seasonally adjusted basis, average house prices in the UK decreased by 0.4% between June 2024 and July 2024.

Of English regions, annual house price inflation was highest in the North East, where prices increased by 3.8% in the 12 months to July 2024. London was the English region with the lowest annual inflation, where prices decreased by 0.4% in the 12 months to July 2024.

The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors’ (RICS’) July 2024 UK Residential Market Survey reported that new buyer enquiries and agreed sales both held steady in July, and that the flow of new listings signalled a broadly flat trend. RICS also reported that while most English regions exhibited flat or negative net balances for the house prices series, Scotland and Northern Ireland once again saw upward moves in house prices.

The Bank of England’s Agents’ summary of business conditions - 2024 Q2 reported that housing market is stable in terms of the number of transactions and level of demand.

HMRC’s UK Property Transactions Statistics showed that in July 2024, on a seasonally adjusted basis, the estimated number of transactions of residential properties with a value of £40,000 or greater was 91,000. This is 6.7% higher than 12 months ago (July 2023). Between June 2024 and July 2024, UK transactions decreased by 0.6% on a seasonally adjusted basis.

The Bank of England’s Money and Credit July 2024 release reported that mortgage approvals for house purchases, an indicator of future borrowing, increased by 62,000 in July 2024, the highest since September 2022 (65,100), and up from 60,600 in June.

3. Price changes

3.1 Annual price change

Annual price change for UK by country over the past 5 years

Average UK house price annual inflation was 2.2% (provisional estimate) in the 12 months to July 2024, down from the revised estimate of 2.7% in the 12 months to June 2024.

The average UK house price was £290,000 in July 2024 (provisional estimate), which is £6,000 higher than 12 months ago. Average house prices in the 12 months to July 2024 increased in England to £306,000 (1.6%), increased in Wales to £218,000 (2.0%) and increased in Scotland to £199,000 (6.0%). The average house price increased in the year to Q2 (Apr to Jun) 2024 to £185,000 in Northern Ireland (6.4%).

3.2 Average price by country and government office region

Price, monthly change and annual change by country and government office region

Country and government office region Price Monthly change Annual change
England £305,879 0.2% 1.6%
Northern Ireland (Quarter 2 - 2024) £185,025 3.6% 6.4%
Scotland £199,398 3.1% 6.0%
Wales £218,184 1.1% 2.0%
East Midlands £248,817 1.3% 2.5%
East of England £341,160 0.7% 0.3%
London £520,747 -0.3% -0.4%
North East £164,555 0.1% 3.8%
North West £219,887 0.0% 2.8%
South East £381,188 0.1% 0.5%
South West £320,415 0.5% 1.0%
West Midlands Region £253,707 0.0% 2.2%
Yorkshire and The Humber £214,918 -0.5% 3.7%

Price changes by country and government office region

On a non-seasonally adjusted basis, average UK house prices increased more slowly between June 2024 and July 2024 (0.6%) than in the same period 12 months ago (1.1%). On a seasonally adjusted basis, average house prices in the UK decreased by 0.4% between June 2024 and July 2024.

Note: The Northern Ireland figure represents a 3-month change and is not comparable with the other regions and countries.

3.3 Average price by property type

Average monthly price by property type

Property type July 2024 July 2023 Difference
Detached £443,180 £433,387 2.3%
Semi-detached £281,907 £274,845 2.6%
Terraced £239,524 £234,175 2.3%
Flat or maisonette £235,537 £232,235 1.4%
All £289,723 £283,532 2.2%

4. Sales volumes

In recent periods, the total transaction volumes available to calculate UK HPI estimates for the latest months have been lower than historically (see UK HPI QMI Section 2.2: Accuracy). This has arisen from a combination of total transaction volumes in England and Wales falling over the past year (HMRC has reported a 22% fall in 2023) and a reduction in the proportion of transactions, processed by HM Land Registry, for the first estimate. The sample for the latest estimate is about half of usual volumes. The processing of new build properties has been particularly affected.

The Office for National Statistics and HM Land Registry are working together to resolve this, including seeking a greater balance between processing recently received applications and those that are older to help preserve the quality of UK HPI statistics.

In 2020, we introduced pooling for new build transactions for certain months in England and Wales. In December 2023, we implemented a methodology improvement to the Great Britain model, which increased UK coherence and improved UK HPI statistics quality. From December 2023, HM Land Registry increased UK HPI processing, so the proportion of total transactions processed for the first estimate is expected to increase in the coming months.

In March 2024 and April 2024, UK HPI estimates were revised from January 2021 onwards by making use of price data processed outside the UK HPI’s normal 12-month revision period. In September 2024’s release, UK HPI estimates were revised from January 2022 onwards. From October 2024’s release, UK HPI will return to the usual 12-month revision period.

Users should be aware that revisions may be larger than usual and should note the significantly greater uncertainty around new build prices.

4.1 Sales volumes

Number of sales volumes by country

Provisional UK HPI estimates for July 2024 are based on approximately 25,100 records for England, 7,100 for Scotland, and 1,400 for Wales. This represents 35% of HMRC’s provisional sales estimate for July 2024, as detailed in their Monthly property transactions completed in the UK with value of £40,000 or above estimates. Over time, more records will become available for recent periods, which will be used to revise UK HPI estimates and sales volumes, in line with the revision policy published by the ONS and HM Land Registry.

Sales estimates from UK HPI differ from estimates from HMRC because of different data sources, revision period size and coverage. HMRC’s Quality report states there are likely to be inaccuracies in their data because of reporting or keying errors, such as misclassification between residential and non-residential transactions. However, HMRC take steps to reduce this measurement error. Another reason for differences could be that residential property transactions, where the buyer or seller is a corporate body, company or business, are excluded from UK HPI data, but included in HMRC data.

Further information on data sources, revision policy, methods and quality is available in HM Land Registry’s UK HPI guidance.

Comparing the provisional volume estimate for the current month with the revised volume estimate for the corresponding month in the previous year

Country May 2024 May 2023
England 29,930 44,542
Northern Ireland 1,688 1,740
Scotland 8,986 7,673
Wales 1,715 2,515

Note: Comparing the provisional volume estimate for the current month with the revised 12-month volume estimate.

Note: The ‘Difference’ column has been removed from this table as the latest month’s data are not yet complete.

Note: The number of property transactions for May 2024 will increase as more transactions are incorporated into the index. See our Revisions Policy for more information.

Comparing the provisional UK HPI volume estimate for May 2023 with the provisional UK HPI volume estimate for May 2024, volume transactions decreased by 7.1% in England, increased by 19.2% in Scotland and decreased by 10.4% in Wales. Northern Ireland’s UK HPI volume transactions increased by 6.0% in the year to Quarter 2 2024.

UK Property Transaction Statistics published by HM Revenue & Customs (which differ in coverage but are more complete for this period) report that in the 12 months to May 2024, on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, HMRC volume transactions increased by 26.4% in England, 19.4% in Scotland, 18.9% in Wales and by 19.2% in Northern Ireland.

4.2 Sales volumes for the UK over the past 5 years

Sales volumes for 2020 to 2024 by country: May

Note: The number of property transactions for May 2024 will increase as more transactions are incorporated into the UK HPI index. See our Revisions Policy for more information.

Comparing the provisional UK HPI volume estimate for May 2023 with the provisional UK HPI volume estimate for May 2024, UK volume transactions decreased by 2.2%.

UK Property Transaction Statistics published by HM Revenue & Customs (which differ in coverage but are more complete for this period) report that on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, HMRC volume transactions for the UK increased by 25.2% in the 12 months to May 2024.

5. Property status for UK

Transactions involving the creation of a new register, such as new builds, are more complex and need more time to process. This means they can take longer to appear in the land registers. The volume of new build transactions for the most recent 2 months are not at a reliable level for reporting the breakdown between new build and existing resold property, so they are not included in the report.

New build and existing resold property

Property status Average price May 2024 Monthly change Annual change
New build £422,288 8.7% 23.2%
Existing resold property £280,469 1.1% 1.3%

Note: Since the October 2017 release, amendments have been made to our estimation model when calculating our provisional estimate. Find out further information and the impact of this change in the methods used to produce the UK HPI.

6. Buyer status for Great Britain

First time buyer and former owner occupier

For Great Britain only, Northern Ireland data is not available for buyer status.

Type of buyer Average price July 2024 Monthly change Annual change
First time buyer £242,789 0.5% 2.4%
Former owner occupier £335,756 0.7% 1.9%

7. Funding status for Great Britain

Cash and mortgage

For Great Britain only, Northern Ireland data is not available for funding status.

Funding status Average price July 2024 Monthly change Annual change
Cash £273,877 0.6% 1.6%
Mortgage £301,922 0.6% 2.4%

8. Access the data

Download the data as CSV files or access it with our UK HPI tool.

Data revisions

View any revisions to previously published data in the data downloads or find out more about revisions in our guidance About the UK HPI.

10. About the UK House Price Index

The UK House Price Index (UK HPI) is calculated by the Office for National Statistics and Land & Property Services Northern Ireland. Find out about the methodology used to create the UK HPI.

Data for the UK House Price Index is provided by HM Land Registry, Registers of Scotland, The Land & Property Services/Northern Ireland Statistics & Research Agency and the Valuation Office Agency.

Find out more about the UK House Price Index.

A key determinant of house prices is the demographic characteristics of the area in which the property is located. The UK HPI uses the socio-demographic classification, known as Acorn, in the hedonic regression model to measure the affluence of the area.

Prior to 20 December 2023’s publication, property transactions in Great Britain were excluded from the regression model if their Acorn classification was missing. From 20 December 2023’s publication, these properties are included in the regression model from January 2023’s data onwards, but are given less weight in the calculations, as described above. This methodology improvement aligns how transactions with missing Acorn classification are used in the Great Britain model and Northern Ireland model, increasing coherence across the UK and improving the quality of UK HPI statistics.

11. Contact

Eileen Morrison, Data Services Team Leader, HM Land Registry

Email eileen.morrison@landregistry.gov.uk

Telephone 0300 006 5288

Aimee North, Head of Housing Market Indices, Office for National Statistics

Email aimee.north@ons.gov.uk

Telephone 01633 456400

Ciara Cunningham, Statistician for the Northern Ireland HPI

Email ciara.cunningham@finance-ni.gov.uk

Telephone 028 90 336035

Anne MacDonald, Land & Property Data Team, Registers of Scotland

Email Anne.MacDonald@ros.gov.uk

Telephone 0131 378 4991