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PROPERTY PRICES MASSIVELY DIFFER BETWEEN REMAIN AND BREXIT AREAS

Property prices in areas with the highest Brexit vote have increased just 9% since 2011, compared to 18% in areas with the highest percentage Remain vote, according to research from online estate agents HouseSimple.com.

  • Areas with the highest proportion of Remain votes have seen average prices increase £61,785 since 2011
  • In stark contrast, average property prices have risen just £33,128 in the highest voting Brexit areas in the same period
  • Prices in Burnley and Hartlepool, the areas with the strongest Brexit vote, have fallen 8% and 5%, respectively, since 2011
  • Cambridge, which voted to Remain by 73.9%, second only to Edinburgh (74.4%) experienced the highest property price rise of 43% or £180,687 
  • In London, the five Brexit boroughs are amongst those with the capital’s lowest property price rises since 2011
  • The boroughs with the highest Remain vote – Hackney, Lambeth and Islington – have experienced some of the biggest increases in property value in the capital

The research took a sample of 80 local authorities and how they voted in the recent EU referendum. HouseSimple then looked at the 20 areas with the highest percentage of Leave votes and 20 with the highest Remain votes and compared how property prices have fared in those areas over the past five years.

The findings reveal that average house prices have increased £33,128 (9%) in Brexit strongholds compared to £61,785 (18%) in Remain areas.  Across the entire sample of 80 councils, average house prices have risen 19% in Remain areas versus 15% for Leave.

The areas with the highest Brexit vote – Burnley and Hartlepool – have seen the biggest decrease in property values in the UK since 2011; with prices down 8% (£2,792) and 5% (£9,805) respectively.

The following table shows the local authorities with the highest Brexit vote and how property prices have performed in the past five years:

Local authority % of Brexit vote Property price – current (£) % change in property price 2011-2016
Hartlepool 69.57% £97,554 -5%
Burnley 66.61% £72,584 -8%
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk 66.40% £189,566 18%
Middlesbrough 65.48% £106,960 -2%
Epping Forest 62.69% £440,140 25%
Wolverhampton 62.57% £129,049 2%
Dover 62.15% £217,322 16%
Stockton-on-Tees 61.73% £126,813 4%
Rochdale 60.07% £120,718 6%
Ashford 59.43% £261,718 20%
Stevenage 59.25% £259,954 23%
Wrexham 59.04% £144,115 4%
Maidstone 58.75% £267,132 22%
Portsmouth 58.08% £186,931 16%
Shropshire 56.87% £192,468 4%
Rugby 56.70% £204,618 24%
Cornwall 56.52% £213,184 7%
Darlington 56.18% £124,902 -4%
Stafford 55.99% £187,720 5%
Newport 55.99% £142,592 7%
AVERAGE 60.26% £184,302 9%

By comparison, Cambridge, which had the second highest percentage of Remain votes, after Edinburgh (74.4%), experienced a property price rise of 43% or £180,687 in the last five years and Brighton and Hove, which voted to Remain by 68.6% saw property prices increase 25% or £96,522 in the same period.

The following table shows the local authorities with the highest Remain vote and how property prices have performed in the last five years:

Local authority % of Remain vote Property price – current (£) % change in property price 2011-2016
Edinburgh 74.44% £233,975 14%
Cambridge 73.85% £450,301 43%
Brighton and Hove 68.62% £335,192 25%
Stirling 67.72% £166,718 7%
Glasgow 66.59% £109,526 3%
Bristol 61.73% £242,562 25%
South Cambridgeshire 60.23% £356,084 25%
Cardiff 60.02% £189,405 19%
Dundee 59.78% £117,413 12%
Winchester 58.93% £386,372 23%
Warwick 58.78% £284,182 20%
Fife 58.59% £123,005 10%
Waverley 58.39% £436,613 18%
Liverpool 58.19% £117,429 6%
Gwynedd 58.05% £143,668 4%
York 58.04% £234,795 20%
Bath and North East Somerset 57.85% £307,381 16%
Rushcliffe 57.55% £239,128 16%
Wokingham 56.69% £407,986 29%
Norwich 56.24% £187,346 20%
AVERAGE 61.26 £253,454 18%

 

London

In the capital, the five areas which voted to leave the European Union are amongst the London areas with the lowest property price increases in the last five years, with increases of 30% in Havering and Bexley, 34% in Sutton, 35% in Hillingdon and 37% in Barking and Dagenham – compared to the 41% London average.

On the other side of the fence; the boroughs with the highest Remain vote – Hackney, Lambeth and Islington – have experienced some of the biggest increases in property value in the capital since 2011. Property prices have risen 62% in Hackney to £533,875, 50% in Islington to £665,791 and 49% to £526,337.

The following table shows how each of the London boroughs voted and the percentage rise in property prices since 2011:

Borough Vote % of the vote Property price % change in property price 2011-2016
Barking and Dagenham Leave 62.44% £271,828 37%
Barnet Remain 62.23% £512,316 39%
Bexley Leave 62.95% £311,587 30%
Brent Remain 59.74% £485,870 45%
Bromley Remain 50.65% £423,901 37%
Camden Remain 74.94% £872,369 35%
City of Westminster Remain 68.97% £975,595 45%
Croydon Remain 54.29% £345,858 38%
Ealing Remain 60.40% £477,627 39%
Enfield Remain 55.82% £379,174 35%
Greenwich Remain 55.59% £366,517 38%
Hackney Remain 78.48% £533,875 62%
Hammersmith and Fulham Remain 70.02% £780,863 45%
Haringey Remain 75.57% £537,527 39%
Harrow Remain 54.63% £451,907 32%
Havering Leave 69.66% £333,446 30%
Hillingdon Leave 56.37% £395,562 35%
Hounslow Remain 51.06% £382,648 27%
Islington Remain 75.22% £665,791 50%
Kensington and Chelsea Remain 68.69% £1,314,702 35%
Kingston upon Thames Remain 61.61% £484,213 43%
Lambeth Remain 78.62% £526,337 49%
Lewisham Remain 69.86% £410,126 50%
Merton Remain 62.94% £505,712 47%
Newham Remain 52.84% £347,584 43%
Redbridge Remain 53.97% £386,014 27%
Richmond upon Thames Remain 69.29% £650,955 42%
Southwark Remain 72.81% £516,675 47%
Sutton Leave 53.72% £357,563 34%
Tower Hamlets Remain 67.46% £468,478 40%
Waltham Forest Remain 59.10% £424,663 55%
Wandsworth Remain 75.03% £606,611 45%

Alex Gosling, CEO of online estate agents HouseSimple.com comments: “The Brexit vote certainly came as a surprise to many of us. What the longer-term impact of the out vote will be only time will tell, but we haven’t seen prices plummeting as the doom-mongers were predicting.

“What we do know is that areas with a strong Brexit vote are the areas that have seen less growth in property prices over the past five years. Of course it’s not cause and effect but it’s sure to have had some influence on voters’ decisions last week. And as we saw in the voting, the country is also divided when it comes to property growth. Many areas of the country, particularly in the North, haven’t enjoyed the boom times since 2011 experienced in London, which voted strongly to remain in the EU.”