Skip to content

Scotland sees strongest house price growth for seven months

It is the strongest year on year increase since May 2015, taking the average house price to £170,641, with the typical property up by £4,000, according to the index from Your Move.

But Aberdeen recorded a steep fall in house prices, down 6.8% year on year as demand fell due to the falling oil price.

Overall sales were strong with transactions up 21% in December 2015 compared to the same month in 2014 and the top end of the market is recovering, with 11 million pound home typically sold each month by the end of 2015.

But Christine Campbell, Your Move managing director in Scotland, pointed out that the increase over the year to December is still below the 4.4% rise in 2014, as growth was skewed by the introduction of the Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT).

She also pointed out that the average house price has now broken through the £170,000 barrier again for the first time since May and 2015 was a turbulent one for some parts of Scotland.

Aberdeen experienced the biggest dip in house prices with property values in the area falling 6.8% or £15,551. ‘This decline has been driven by the drop in demand for homes in the area, as the tumbling oil price reduces employment and investment into the city,’ said Campbell.

‘Aberdeen has also felt the negative affect of the introduction of the LBTT, as it’s home to a large number of higher value properties which the tax hit hardest. The city has now slipped to sixth in the house price rankings, down from third at the end of 2014,’ she explained.
 
Total sales for the year were 6% higher than in 2014, in stark contrast to England and Wales where sales are down 2.6% year on year. In Scotland, the type of homes selling swiftest were flats, up 18.4% in the last quarter of 2015 compared to the same period in 2014.

The smallest increase was in pricier detached properties, but sales still rose 8.8% over the same time period. ‘As typically the cheapest type of property on the market, flats have benefited most from the switch to LBTT which removed tax paid on purchases under £145,000. With an extra 3% surcharge on second homes coming into force in April, we can expect another jump in sales during the first quarter of 2016, as sellers hurry to beat the tax hike,’ Campbell said.
 
The million pound property market has seen the most extreme changes this year. Overall, there has been a 30% annual increase in the sale of high value homes in 2015. Half of these sales came in March, as owners rushed to beat the introduction of the LBTT.

This was followed by a short term drought which saw the average number of million pound sales fall to just 3.5 per month in the four months immediately after the tax rise. ‘The top end of the market is firmly in recovery, with the number of £1 million sales increasing to an average of 10.5 a month in the last four months of the year, not too far off 2014’s average of 12 sales each month,’ added Campbell.
 

Related