This means that the average house prices has increased by £17,963 since December 2014 but property values in central London fell by 8.7% on average during 2015, dragged down by higher stamp duty, the index report from Your Move and Reeds Rains shows.
The annual price growth figures falls to 4.7% of London and the South East are excluded from the calculation and month on month prices increased by 0.6%.
Outside of these top five central Boroughs, London prices increased by 11%, the biggest increase, followed by the East Midlands, driven by a 10.6% annual rise in Nottingham’s house prices.
Where sales are concerned it was the strongest December for since 2006, with transactions up 7.1% year on year as buyers compete for fewer homes on the market.
Richard Sexton, director of e.surv chartered surveyors, believes that the highest year on year house price growth for 10 months may prompt existing home owners to move up to the next rung of the property ladder in 2016, freeing up homes at the bottom for first time buyers.
‘The rise in property prices has been propelled so far by a sinking supply of houses coming onto the market, compared with increasing enquiries from potential buyers eager to clamber aboard the property ladder,’ he said.
‘If the current speed of house price growth continues into 2016, the value of the average home may soon pass the £300,000 watermark, having reached £250,000 in December 2013. Property price rises have certainly left the recession in their wake, with house prices passing the £200,000 milestone only in October 2005,’ he added.
He also pointed out that prices are probably set to rise further during the first quarter of 2016 before the Government’s new house building programmes have a chance to boost the supply of property on the market.
The data shows that in Kensington and Chelsea, London’s most expensive borough, prices fell by 14.2% year on year and Sexton explained that the tax changes announced in 2014’s Autumn Statement increasing the rate of stamp duty on homes worth over £1.5 million to 12% has had an effect.
‘While price increases in the central boroughs used to keep England and Wales’ house price growth afloat, since January they have been anchoring down the average price increases in London and the country overall,’ he said.
‘The reality is that there has been an undercurrent of growth in the rest of London, with values outside these top end boroughs rising by 11% year on year. The increase has been strongest in the cheaper boroughs, with Newham seeing 23.8% annual growth. But the overall price rise across the capital has been submerged by the top end, with the annual change in London standing at just 5.6%, below the UK average,’ he added.
He also explained that the 8.1% year on year price rise in the South East has been particularly propelled by demand for homes in commuter towns. Luton has seen the largest increase of 18.5% year on year, with the average cost of a semi-detached home in the town increasing by approximately £40,000 since 2014.
The East Midlands has also seen a significant surge in house prices, overtaking East Anglia to become the second fastest growing region in England. This acceleration has emanated from a boom in Nottingham which has seen year on year house price growth of 10.6%, boosting the region’s overall annual growth rate of 6.7%.