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More housing areas become affordable in the UK in last 12 months

However, affordability remains below the 2003 level when the average house was considered to be affordable in 43% of towns and before the house price boom, the research from the Halifax also reveals.

For the survey affordability is measured by the ability of key public sector workers to buy their own home and is based on the benchmark ratio of average house price to average earnings, where housing is considered affordable to buy if the ratio is below four.

All key worker occupations analysed, fire fighters, nurses, teachers, paramedics, and police officers, have seen large improvements in the affordability to buy in the last five years. The improvement in the past year has come largely as result of house price declines in northern areas.

Nurses have seen the number of affordable towns increase from 7% to 35%, teachers from 11% to 40%, and fire fighters have seen an increase from 1% to 31%. However, the largest gains have been made by the police with an increase from 18% to 49% and paramedics for 18% to 50%.

Overall, in the past year, 20 towns have become affordable but 11 have become unaffordable. Among those which have become affordable are Bathgate in West Lothian, Grantham and Margate.

The region which has seen the greatest number of towns, six, switch from unaffordable to affordable is Scotland. At the other end of the scale, the West Midlands saw the most towns, five, become unaffordable for key workers.

There are currently four regions which have an average house price to key worker average earnings ratio of less than four whereas in 2008 there were no regions where the average priced home was affordable for key workers.

The lowest house price to earnings ratio for key workers in Britain is in the North at 3.64 followed by Wales at 3.85, the North West at 3.87, and Yorkshire and the Humber at 3.93. London at 7.64 and the South East at 6.72 have the highest ratios and are, therefore, the least affordable regions for key workers to buy a property.

Four of the 10 most affordable towns for key workers to buy in are in Scotland. Wishaw in North Lanarkshire is the most affordable town in Scotland with an average house price to earnings ratio of 2.6 followed by Cumnock in East Ayrshire at 2.64, Irvine in North Ayrshire at 2.65 and Clydebank at 2.71.

Port Talbot in South Wales is the most affordable town in Britain for all key workers at 2.58 while the least affordable areas for key workers are all in London, where house prices are significantly higher than the national average. The least affordable areas include Islington, Hammersmith and Fulham, Camden, Westminster, and Kensington and Chelsea.

‘Nationally, there have been considerable improvements in the ability of key public sector workers to purchase their own home since the start of the housing downturn, with 38% of towns now being deemed affordable to buy compared to just 4% in 2008,’ said Martin Ellis, housing economist at the Halifax.

‘The greatest concentration of affordable housing is found in towns in northern England, Scotland and Wales. However, there are still significant affordability issues for key workers in London and the South East,’ he pointed out.

‘A combination of declining or static house prices in many areas, combined with some growth in earnings, has contributed to the improvement in housing affordability since 2008. However, significant house price growth in the past decade as a whole has meant that housing is still unaffordable in more than half of the towns surveyed,’ he added.

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