This takes the average price of a home in Scotland to £169,850, up 2.4% compared wot November 2014, according to the latest index from Your Move.
East Renfrewshire had the biggest upswing as new home developments lifted prices 5.2% since October and overall it was the strongest November for home sales since 2007 with transactions up 13% year on year.
According to Christine Campbell, Your Move managing director in Scotland, the rise provides a welcome bounce back for home owners after a turbulent year but house prices are still below March’s record peak.
The driving force behind this up and down has been the introduction of the Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) last April which while lowering tax for the vast majority of buyers has hit the top end of the market.
However, as high end housing stock starts to shift again, price rises are strengthening in more expensive areas but Campbell warned that the growth spurt may be short lived with the 3% surcharge on second home and buy to let property purchases coming into force in April.
‘If the impact of this tax increase mirrors the effect of the LBTT, we may see a sharp spike in values at the start of 2016 as buy to let buyers rush to avoid the tax hike, followed by a sudden dip after its introduction,’ said Campbell.
‘Investors may well be dissuaded from purchasing additional properties then, with a £250,000 home liable for an extra £7,500 in Stamp Duty once the tax is implemented. Sellers may find themselves having to subsequently reduce prices to make their properties more attractive, accounting for the higher surcharge for some buyers. There have been cases of some developers offering £10,000 contributions towards the LBTT in order to sell their units,’ she explained.
The data also shows that on the back of strong monthly growth in October, East Lothian has now overtaken Inverclyde as the mainland region with the highest annual increase in property prices at 10.9%.
‘This region illustrates the recovery in the top end of the market with 30 sales of properties worth over half a million pounds in the last three months, a significant improvement on 18 sales in the same period last year,’ said Campbell.
‘The most notable of the sales was a nine bedroom property going for £2.6 million, the second most expensive property sold this year. This marks a clear turning point when you consider the drought of million pound home sales immediately after the introduction of the LBTT,’ she pointed out.
She also explained that November’s home sales have defied the odds by avoiding the usual seasonal slowdown. Transactions increased 1.2% month on month in a period where there is usually see a 4% dip.
South Lanarkshire has seen the largest upswing, with a 19.4% increase compared the previous month. Sales here have been particularly buoyant because the average price of a detached house is around £220,000, so buyers now pay less with the LBTT than under the old Stamp Duty rates.
‘Looking back at previous years, this has been the highest November for sales since 2007, up 13% compared to the same month last year. Unlike the rest of Great Britain, total sales in Scotland are higher for the first 11 months of the year than in 2014. However, we may see this progress fall away next year, as the new second home surcharge take effect,’ added Campbell.