Country life costs Brits over £44,000
- Rural homes 20% more expensive than those in urban areas
- Waverley in the South East is the most expensive rural area with an average house price of £487,824
- First-time buyers account for 12% fewer country homes than their urban counterparts
Countryside homes are £44,454 (20%) more expensive on average than in urban areas1, according to the latest annual Halifax Rural Housing Review.
Whilst a ‘rural premium’ exists across the country, the research found substantial differences across Great Britain – the greatest in the West Midlands where the average house price in rural areas (£280,776) is £89,272 (47%) higher than in the region’s urban areas (£191,504). The smallest difference is in the East of England where there average premium on countryside homes drops to £27,765 (or 9%). (See Table 1)
Rural affordability North South divide
Property in rural areas is less affordable than in urban areas, with the property price in rural areas 7.6 times average annual earnings2 compared with a ratio of 6.5 in urban areas.
All 10 of the least affordable rural local authority districts are in southern England, where North Dorset is the least affordable rural district with an average house price of £361,603 – 11.4 times local annual average earnings (£31,723). The second least affordable area is Chichester with and average house price of £411,547 (10.8), followed by West Oxfordshire (9.9).
Those wishing to escape to the country on a more manageable budget should look to the most affordable rural districts in the north of England and Scotland. Copeland and East Ayrshire are the most affordable rural districts in Britain, where the average house price is 4.1 times local average gross annual earnings. (See Tables 2 and 3)
Urban property values have risen more rapidly than rural over the past five years
Between 2012 and 2017, the average price of a countryside home rose by 31% compared with an average increase of 43% in urban areas1, resulting in the urban-rural premium gap narrowing from 31% (or £47,769) in 2012 to 20% (£44,454) in 2017.
Despite this, the rate of growth for both urban and rural areas has been the same at 3% over the past year.
First-time buyers priced out of rural areas
First-time buyers account for 41% of all mortgage financed purchases in rural areas, compared to 53% in urban areas, with affordability the main reason for the lower proportion of first-time buyers in the countryside.
Richard Washington, Mortgages Director at Halifax, said:
“Homeowners looking to escape to the country can expect to pay an average premium of 20% for a property. Housing affordability, particularly in the south of England, is putting a country home out of reach for many people, especially those looking to buy their first property. This is reflected in first-time buyers accounting for a smaller proportion of homebuyers in the countryside relative to urban areas.”
RESEARCH HIGHLIGHTS
- The least affordable rural local authority districts outside the South and Eastern England are Malvern Hills (8.0) and South Northamptonshire (8.0) in the West and East Midlands.
- Waverley in the South East is the most expensive rural area in Britain with an average house price of £487,824. This is followed by Sevenoaks (£453,458), South Oxfordshire (£434,544) and Uttlesford (£433,934).
- The average house price in Waverley is more than three and a half times higher than in East Ayrshire in Scotland (£128,864) – the cheapest rural district in the country.
- Getting on the rural property ladder is at its most challenging for first-time buyers in southern England, where they only make up a quarter of all purchases in the Cotswolds and East Devon and around a quarter in Chichester (26%) and Uttlesford (27%).
- The proportion of first-time buyers is significantly higher in some areas outside the South, accounting for more than three out of five buyers in Forest Heath in Suffolk (64%) and over a half in Dumfries and Galloway (55%), Western Isles (55%) and Moray (53%). (See Tables 4 and 5)
Table 1: Rural and urban regional average prices, 2017
Average Price 2017* | % Change (2012-2017) | Premium for Rural v Urban | ||||
Region | Rural | Urban | Rural | Urban | £ | % |
North East | 169,232 | 151,067 | 26% | 28% | 18,165 | 12% |
North West | 231,413 | 173,683 | 27% | 35% | 57,730 | 33% |
Yorkshire and The Humber | 216,401 | 164,365 | 30% | 32% | 52,036 | 32% |
East Midlands | 239,901 | 184,475 | 38% | 44% | 55,426 | 30% |
West Midlands | 280,776 | 191,504 | 30% | 40% | 89,272 | 47% |
East of England | 332,822 | 305,057 | 50% | 58% | 27,765 | 9% |
South East | 416,521 | 331,516 | 37% | 52% | 85,005 | 26% |
South West | 296,273 | 240,650 | 26% | 39% | 55,623 | 23% |
Scotland | 185,713 | 166,696 | 17% | 27% | 19,017 | 11% |
Wales | 183,067 | 162,986 | 27% | 30% | 20,082 | 12% |
Great Britain exc London | 263,050 | 218,596 | 31% | 43% | 44,454 | 20% |
Source: Halifax. *12 months to August
Table 2: 10 Most Affordable Rural Local Authority Districts, 2017
Local Authority District | Region | House Prices 2017 (£)* | Average earnings 2017 (£)** | Price to Earnings ratio |
Copeland | North West | 157,775 | 38,699 | 4.1 |
East Ayrshire | Scotland | 128,864 | 31,322 | 4.1 |
Allerdale | North West | 145,191 | 34,760 | 4.2 |
Dumfries and Galloway | Scotland | 135,313 | 29,662 | 4.6 |
County Durham | North East | 136,458 | 29,380 | 4.6 |
Western Isles | Scotland | 132,353 | 27,776 | 4.8 |
Shetland Islands | Scotland | 182,090 | 36,086 | 5.0 |
Carmarthenshire | Wales | 152,540 | 29,572 | 5.2 |
Highland | Scotland | 174,716 | 33,287 | 5.2 |
Wyre | North West | 159,026 | 29,421 | 5.4 |
Rural Great Britain | 263,050 | £34,636 | 7.6 | |
Urban Great Britain exc London | 218,596 | £33,537 | 6.5 |
Source: Halifax. *12 months to August; ONS
Table 3: 10 Least Affordable Rural Local Authority Districts, 2017
Local Authority District | Region | House Prices 2017 (£)* | Average earnings 2017 (£)** | Price to Earnings ratio |
North Dorset | South West | 361,603 | 31,723 | 11.4 |
Chichester | South East | 411,547 | 38,004 | 10.8 |
West Oxfordshire | South East | 355,215 | 35,763 | 9.9 |
Cotswold | South West | 368,454 | 37,643 | 9.8 |
Horsham | South East | 395,022 | 40,732 | 9.7 |
Winchester | South East | 426,067 | 45,212 | 9.4 |
Waverley | South East | 487,824 | 52,324 | 9.3 |
Sevenoaks | South East | 453,458 | 48,853 | 9.3 |
East Hampshire | South East | 420,790 | 45,545 | 9.2 |
West Dorset | South West | 290,284 | 31,644 | 9.2 |
Rural Great Britain | 263,050 | £34,636 | 7.6 | |
Urban Great Britain exc London | 218,596 | £33,537 | 6.5 |
Source: Halifax. *12 months to August; ONS
Table 4: Rural Local Authority Districts with the lowest % of first-time buyers (FTBs), 2017
Local Authority District | Region | FTB% share of all buyers* |
Cotswold | South West | 25% |
East Devon | South West | 25% |
Chichester | South East | 26% |
Uttlesford | East of England | 27% |
Derbyshire Dales | East Midlands | 29% |
Stratford-on-Avon | West Midlands | 29% |
Torridge | South West | 30% |
Mid Suffolk | East of England | 30% |
South Northamptonshire | East Midlands | 30% |
East Hampshire | South East | 30% |
Rural Great Britain | 41% | |
Urban Great Britain | 53% |
Source: Halifax House Price Database; * 12 months to August
Table 5: Rural Local Authority Districts with the highest % of first-time buyers (FTBs), 2017
Local Authority District | Region | FTB% share of all buyers* |
Forest Heath | East of England | 64% |
Dumfries and Galloway | Scotland | 55% |
Western Isles | Scotland | 55% |
Moray | Scotland | 53% |
Carmarthenshire | Wales | 52% |
County Durham | North East | 50% |
Ceredigion | Wales | 49% |
North Devon | South West | 49% |
East Ayrshire | Scotland | 49% |
Shetland Islands | Scotland | 48% |
Rural Great Britain | 41% | |
Urban Great Britain | 53% |
Source: Halifax House Price Database; * 12 months to August
Kindly shared by Halifax