London’s Most Expensive Gardens: Homes by prime London’s garden squares will set you back £5m more than the rest of the neighbourhood

Summer is here and while the heatwave of last week seems to have subsided, the longer evenings and warmer weather mean that many Londoners will be flocking to their gardens, parks or any piece of green space they can find.

With this is mind, prime and super-prime property portal Vyomm has looked at the cost of living by 10 of the capital’s most prestigious garden squares, revealing how they can cost as much as triple the price of a property around the corner.

Using data from Homesearch, Vyomm looked at the average property prices surrounding the 10 most sought after garden squares in prime central London, all of which are located within the City of Westminster and Kensington and Chelsea. The data shows that, on average, it will set you back a cool £5.1m to live within reach of these leafy hideaways, which averages out to £2.1m more than the average property costs in the surrounding roads – and this is within Kensington and Chelsea and Westminster we’re talking about, not comparing with the London average.

Carlton House Terrace Gardens (Westminster): £11,263,508

The most prestigious of all is Westminster’s Carlton House Terrace, with an average house price of not just seven, but eight figures! Within close proximity to Trafalgar Square and St James’s Park, it is London’s most expensive garden and when compared to the average cost of living in the immediate area, it commands a £5.2m price difference over the surrounding properties.

Wilton Crescent Garden (Westminster): £7,047,340

With property surrounding it commanding an average price of over £7m, Wilton Crescent Garden is London’s second most expensive garden and comes in £3.6m more expensive than the average property on the adjacent roads. This works out at more than twice the cost of those homes in the immediate area!

Eaton Square (Westminster): £6,126,777

Just a short walk from Sloane Square, Easton Square ranks as the third most prestigious and expensive garden in London with property reaching £6.1m, just shy of £3m more than the average cost of living on the neighbouring roads.

Markham Square (Kensington and Chelsea): £5,389,286

The first of London’s most expensive gardens to be located in the borough of Kensington and Chelsea, Markham Square is home to a property price of nearly £5.4m, making it the second entry on the list where the average property costs more than double the price of a home literally around the corner.

Other garden squares to feature in the most sought after for prime and super-prime London buyers are Thruloe Square (£4.4m), St James’s Gardens (£4.2m), Rosmead Garden (£3.9m) all in Kensington and Chelsea, Park Crescent (£3.3m) in Westminster, and Kensington Square (£3.3m) and Ladbroke Square (£2.5m), again in Kensington and Chelsea.

Among these, Park Crescent stands out as a garden with a property cost that is almost three times higher than that of the homes on the neighbouring roads.

Founder of Vyomm, Utsav Goenka, commented:

“London is one of the greenest capital cities in the world so we are lucky to have so many parks and other places to spend the hot summer days.

“In any large urban city, the mere presence of a park or other green area is a very sought after commodity and can carry a much higher property price tag for those looking to buy within close proximity to these spaces.

“However, when we talk about prime central London and its garden squares we are talking about far more than green space. To live by and have access to these private pockets of tranquillity within the city is a huge status symbol for the high-end London homeowner and for those at the top end of the market, it’s as important as having the latest £1m supercar parked on the driveway.

“But as with many desirable aspects of high-end London life, there is only a finite level of property stock that can present such opportunities. As a result, property prices around these garden squares carry a much higher price than the average prime London home, and that is really saying something.”

Rankings – Garden Squares by Average Price          
Garden Name Location Average Price Average Price – neighbourhood / proximity roads near to specific Garden location Difference in £ Difference %
Carlton House Terrace Gardens Westminster

£11,263,508

£6,044,486

£5,219,022

86%

Wilton Crescent Garden Belgravia

£7,047,340

£3,395,926

£3,651,413

108%

Eaton Square Belgravia

£6,126,777

£3,141,366

£2,985,412

95%

Markham Square Chelsea

£5,389,286

£2,606,250

£2,783,036

107%

Thurloe Square Brompton

£4,366,537

£3,827,201

£539,337

14%

St James’s Gardens Notting Hill

£4,185,000

£3,667,656

£517,344

14%

Rosmead Garden Notting Hill

£3,856,339

£1,951,085

£1,905,253

98%

Park Crescent Marylebone

£3,263,924

£1,113,093

£2,150,832

193%

Kensington Square Kensington

£3,250,075

£1,955,935

£1,294,140

66%

Ladbroke Square Notting Hill

£2,496,645

£1,900,179

£596,466

31%

           
     

Average difference:

£2,164,225

81%

Properganda PR

National and local media coverage for property businesses. Journo quotes delivered in minutes.

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Section 21s continue to rise ahead of looming ban

The latest research industry insight from LegalforLandlords Section 21 “no-fault” evictions continued to rise in 2025, increasing by 1.7% following a sharp 20.4% surge the previous year. This sustained growth highlights landlords’ continued reliance on Section 21 notices, raising important questions about how possession will be regained once they are outlawed under the Renters’ Rights Act,…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

Rightmove house price data showing a 0.8% month on month increase

Commenting on the latest Rightmove house price data showing a 0.8% month on month increase, Daniel Austin, CEO and co-founder at ASK Partners, said: “Today’s rise in UK house prices points to underlying resilience, but momentum remains constrained by affordability pressures and a ‘higher for longer’ interest rate environment. While recent rate cuts signal easing…
Read More
Breaking News

Canary Wharf tops the London Marathon route

The latest insight from property management specialist Rushbrook & Rathbone has found that E14 is the strongest postcode along the London Marathon route for landlords looking to invest in the capital’s rental market, delivering an estimated average yield of 6.6%. Rushbrook & Rathbone analysed current asking house prices and rents across postcode districts spanning the London…
Read More
Breaking News

46% surge in remortgaging activity in Q1

Stonebridge Mortgage Market Index    Overall mortgage activity rose 24.6% in Q1 while applications for home purchase softened Stonebridge today relaunches its Mortgage Market Briefing as a quarterly Mortgage Market Index   The volume of remortgage applications surged 46% in Q1 prompting overall mortgage activity to jump by a quarter, Stonebridge can reveal. The mortgage…
Read More
Rightmove logo
Breaking News

Housing market remains steady despite higher mortgage rates

The housing market remains steady so far in April despite higher mortgage rates due to global uncertainty. Average new seller asking prices rise by 0.8% (+£2,929) in April to £373,971. This is consistent with February and March, but is below the long-term average for April. The average two‑year fixed rate has risen to 5.42%, from…
Read More
Breaking News

Housing market springs back into life

The latest research by Yopa reveals that as Spring begins, 6.3% more homes are on England’s housing market today compared to the start of the year, with some counties seeing increases of more than 16%, showcasing growing seller confidence in a market that is on the up. Yopa has analysed residential listings data from March…
Read More