Boost for Northern Powerhouse as house prices power £1000 up

  • Regional house prices grow by 0.6% in May.
  • Average North East house currently valued at £156,975 – £996 more than four weeks ago.
  • Rents rise 1.6% to £578 per calendar month – a rise of £3 a week.
  • Whitburn is named “Best to Buy” after prices fall 5% in 2 months. Peterlee is “Best to Invest” after rental yields almost double in a year.

KIS Housing NOW – Housing North of Watford – pulls together the most authoritative and up-to-the-minute data and the expert market analysis of the KIS Intelligence Service to give you an indispensible guide to the state of the North East property market.

Housing Market Analysis

North East house prices rose by 0.6% in May, adding almost £1000 to the value of the average home.

The figure sees regional property prices settling down after two months of volatility saw prices rise by 3.1% in March before falling back 4% in April.

The average house in the region is valued at £156,975 at the end of May 2016 – £996 more than the end of April and 1.8% higher than this time last year, a rise in cash terms of £2525.

The typical property value continues to be, however, 4% lower than the £163,497 recorded at the turn of the year.

Whitley Bay saw the region’s biggest monthly growth, with prices rising by 3.8% over the past four weeks. Other strong performers include Houghton-le-Spring (2.5%), Sunderland (2.4%) and Gateshead (2.2%).

Other areas recorded falls, in particular Jarrow (-1.9%), Seaham (-1.4%) and Durham City and North Shields (0.6%).

Prices in Whitburn fell a further 0.5%, taking their fall over the past two months to 5%. As a result, it is named this month’s Best to Buy.

54% of Whitburn homes are semi-detached, compared to a regional average of 39%. 21% are terraced, compared to a regional average of 30%.

67% of homes are owner-occupied, compared to a regional average of 62%. Just 5% of properties are privately rented, compared to a regional average of 14%. 50% of properties have at least 3 bedrooms.

The most popular age to be in Whitburn is 52 (the age of 1.9% of residents) followed by 47, 44, 45, 48 and 15.

Rental Market Analysis

The average North East rent rose £12 per calendar month to £578pcm in April. This represents a rise of rise of 1.6%, with the rental cost of a North East home

rising on average by £3 every week.

Regional rents are now £30 a month higher May 2015 and £18 higher than May 2014 when the average monthly cost of renting a North East home was £560.

Blyth (£403)is the cheapest place to rent in the North East out of the areas surveyed, with Tynemouth (£1086) the most expensive.

Peterlee continues to be the region’s Buy to Let capital, offering rental yields of 6.1% to investors. Other strong performers continue to be Gateshead (5.4%),

Sunderland (5.3%) and Newcastle (5.1%). Landlords in Morpeth, however, can expect to see a return on their investment of just 3.1%.

Falling property prices and rising rents see the average North East rental yield rising 0.1% to 4.4%, with yields now up 0.4% over the past two months.

Peterlee’s falling house prices, rising rents and rapidly accelerating rental yields– which were 3.9% in April 2015 and are 6.1% today – see the area names this month’s “Best to Invest”.

40% of properties in Peterlee are semi-detached, with 34% terraced and 19% detached. 65% of properties have at least three bedrooms.

63% of Peterlee residents are work between 31 and 48 hours a week. 25% of properties in the area are socially rented, 6% higher than the regional average. Only

9% of properties are privately rented, 4% below the regional average.

 

Property Expert Ajay Jagota is founder and Managing Director of North-East based sales and lettings firm KIS and creator of D-lighted, a deposit replacement insurance for private renters.

He said:

“After a lively few months which saw North East house prices change positively or negatively by at least 3% in January, March and April it’s predictable and perhaps even a little welcome that prices have settled down over the last four weeks.

“Real growth in the North East property market is currently in rents, which after at least two years of stagnation have risen from an average of £552 a month in March to £578 today.

“This could suggest falling stocks of rented homes, which would support the claims that tax changes are forcing landlords to leave the market.

“This doesn’t just have a negative impact on the people who will have to find almost £1000 in deposits to move into a new rental home, it could have a profound impact on the region’s economic future.

“The Centre for Cities this week reported that for the Northern Powerhouse to succeed the government needs to invest more in building up skills and industry, and that transport links such as HS2 won’t be enough. But we need to talk about housing too.

“If the Northern Powerhouse project is successful in persuading businesses to rise, remain in and relocate to our region we’re going to need homes to support the jobs that will be created.

“There’s always been a tendency for national housing programmes to be driven by housing shortages in the south. The North East needs to be able to take a more flexible and longer term approach to investment. We have to have the power to tackle region-specific issues rather than relying on the old one-size fits all Westminster-centric approach.

“It might sound obvious, or even cheesy, but you can’t have a Northern Powerhouse without housing”.

For more information, follow-up interview or images please contact John Hart on 07968 500 871 or john@johnhart.org.uk

This month’s report in full – including area by area statistics – is here:

 https://eauk.rdtsystems.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/housingnowmay16.pdf

Alex Evans

You May Also Enjoy

Breaking News

Fledgling homeowners cut costs by taking on fixer-uppers to achieve dream home

66% of first-time buyers bought a cheaper home because it needed DIY or renovation work done Many choosing a ‘fixer-upper’ were able to buy in their preferred location, add value and put their stamp on it DIY almost mandatory among first-time buyers, with 93% completing at least one project since moving in But three quarters…
Read More
Breaking News

House Price Index for April 2026 – Thoughts from the Indutry

The latest Halifax House Price Index for April 2026 shows that: – On a monthly basis, house prices remained largely static, down by just -0.1% between March and April 2026. Annually, house prices were up 0.4%, albeit this rate of annual growth had slowed from 0.8% the previous month. As a result, the average house…
Read More
Breaking News

House prices remained broadly stable in April

• House prices edged down -0.1% in April, following a -0.5% fall in March • Average property price now £299,313, compared with £299,609 in March • Annual growth slowed to +0.4%, from +0.8% in March • Northern Ireland continues to record the strongest annual growth at +7.6%   Amanda Bryden, Head of Mortgages, Halifax, said:…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 7/5/26

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   The Hidden Economics of AI Agents: Why Businesses May Spend More Than They Ever Did on SaaS AI agents are rapidly being positioned as the next evolution of enterprise software. The problem is that many companies are still evaluating them through a SaaS lens…
Read More
Estate Agent Talk

£15m property market accounts for 0.04% of all homes

The latest analysis from AgentWise has found that while more than 30,000 homes are currently for sale across Great Britain with an asking price between £1m and £5m, properties priced above £1m account for just 6% of all available housing stock, with the market becoming dramatically smaller and increasingly relationship-led as values rise. With so…
Read More
Home and Living

Beware of the underinsurance risk created by property alterations

Property owners are being warned that while alterations may well improve a building, they can also change its rebuild cost. Where works materially affect a building’s size, layout, specification or services, the amount it is insured for may need to be reviewed, as a matter of urgency, according to experts at RebuildCostASSESSMENT.com “It’s a common…
Read More