House prices in UK cities up 11% year on year, latest index shows

House prices in cities across the UK increased by 11% year on year in February, taking the average value to £234,900, according to the latest index.

This was up from 8.1% a year ago and the highest rate of growth for almost 18 months, the Hometrack UK cities house price index shows.

The report says that there has been a notable and unseasonal acceleration in house price growth in the last three months across most large regional cities thanks, in part, to a temporary increase in demand from those looking to beat the stamp duty increase for second homes from April onwards.

It also explains that increased demand from existing home owners in cities where the economic recovery has been less pronounced is an important underlying theme given that the majority of housing sales 80%, continue be driven by home owners.

Some 16 of the 20 cities covered by the index have registered an increase in the annual rate of house price growth increase in the last year. Some regional cities are recording their highest growth rates for over a decade as the recovery in house prices gains momentum.

Four cities have seen the rate of growth slow with the greatest slowdown in Aberdeen and a loss of momentum in Belfast where a modest recovery appears to have stalled with house prices still 45% down on their 2007 levels.

The data also shows that in Portsmouth and Leeds house prices are rising much faster than earnings at between 8% and 9% per annum and Portsmouth, Nottingham and Birmingham are recording the highest rates of annual house price growth for over 10 years while Leeds and Glasgow have the highest growth rates for over eight years.

All these cities have seen a continued pick up in house price growth since 2013 on economic growth, an improving employment outlook, earnings growth and low mortgage rates, the report adds.

However, there are no consistent patterns as to the types of property driving higher growth in these five cities. In Portsmouth detached homes are rising at twice the rate of the city which is the same trend, with a lesser degree of magnitude, in Nottingham.

In Birmingham the highest growth rate is being recorded for flats at 11.3% against 7% for the city while in Leeds terraced houses with growth of 11% are recording the highest growth compared to the city at 7.8%.

The four high growth cities of London, Bristol, Oxford and Cambridge continue to record double digit rates of house price inflation but there are signs that the rate of growth is starting to slow. All these cities recorded a small drop in the headline rate of growth over February as affordability and sentiment factors impact pricing levels

A closer analysis of the 46 local authorities that cover the London City area shows the average growth rate in the last quarter is approaching half the rate recorded, on average, over the last 12 months. The report suggests that slower growth is inevitable in these markets as affordability pressures constrain demand.