
This Valentine’s Day, we’re celebrating a different kind of long-term commitment: buying a home, all on your own.

See how much it last sold for and what it’s worth today.
See sold house prices for your home, street, town or city, compare them over time, and see details and photos from the last time properties were listed on Zoopla.
Our sold house prices are updated every month with official data directly from HM Land Registry, Registers of Scotland, survey records, Royal Mail and Ordnance Survey.


Get the full sold house price history for every property, postcode, town and city in the UK.

Find out what’s changed over the years, from sold prices to photos, floorplans and area insights.

Get a new price estimate every month plus exclusive data on local market activity.
Compare average sold prices between major cities
See regional sold prices across the country
Browse affordable spots in the UK and London
East Midlands: £230,800
East of England: £336,800
London: £526,400
Northern Ireland: £196,000
North East: £149,400
North West: £205,400
Scotland: £173,300
South East: £382,000
South West: £309,400
Wales: £209,000
Yorkshire and the Humber: £192,300
Belfast: £199,600
Birmingham: £215,000
Bristol: £340,900
Cardiff: £257,000
Edinburgh: £281,400
Glasgow: £163,00
Leeds: £215,200
Liverpool: £166,900
Manchester: £235,300
Newcastle: £161,700
Sheffield: £177,000

The average terraced house price has risen 1.7% annually, but terraced homes still offer good value for buyers.

Semi-detached houses are the most popular type of home, driving 2.2% annual price growth.

Detached house price growth sits at 1.2% as affordability slows demand for pricier homes.
Tools and resources for a closer look at house prices.
Stay up-to-date with what's happening in the housing market.

This Valentine’s Day, we’re celebrating a different kind of long-term commitment: buying a home, all on your own.

The 2026 market has hit the ground running with a rebound in demand levels, following a quiet end to 2025. With mortgage rates stabilising at the lowest level in 3 years, buyers are back - but they have more choice than they’ve had in 8 years.

Forget the national headlines - 2026 is all about what’s happening outside your own front door. We’ve ranked every UK postal area to show you exactly what's happening in your local market this year.

If your home is at its best when the frost is biting and the woodburner is lit, you could be sitting on a seasonal advantage. Turns out, there’s nothing like a cold snap to add to the asking price of certain homes in winter.

We expect a stronger than usual start to 2026 as buyers return to the market after the Autumn Budget and seasonal slowdown. The appetite to move home remains strong, but house prices will be kept in check by affordability constraints throughout the market.

From countryside escapes to seaside views, from practical extras to pure luxury, here are the top home features Britain’s buyers have been on the hunt for in 2025.

With the Budget uncertainty now lifted, buyers and sellers can return to making decisions about their next move. Removing the threat of a new annual property tax from 210,000 homes for sale will help revive market activity in higher-value areas. However, the lack of any stamp duty reform means homebuyers will continue to face rising purchase costs.

Where low house prices meet fast train connections. We reveal the UK’s best commuter towns in 2025, giving you the best of both worlds.

Too good to be true? Not so. From student digs, to development opportunities, we've got 10 opportunities for sale with a guide price of £10,000 or less.

Housing market activity is up this summer with high demand, more sales and a record number of houses on the market in July 2025.

More sales, rising supply, plenty of demand and modest house price growth shape a steady UK housing market in June 2025.

Lower mortgage rates are supporting more house sales against a backdrop of modest house price inflation. Our House Price Index tracks key trends in the UK housing market - here’s the latest news in May 2025.
The average house price in the UK is £269,800 in January 2026. This is a rise of 1.2% in the last year.
There is a big difference in house prices between regions and cities. Average regional sold prices range from £149,400 in the North East of England to £526,400 in London. Hull has the cheapest house prices of any city (£116,400) while Cambridge has the highest house prices of any city outside London (£462,400).
More affordable areas have the fastest-growing house prices in 2026. Northern Ireland (+7.6%) and the North West (+3.5%) are the fastest-growing regions, along with the cities of Belfast (+7.6%), Burnley (+5.5%) and Barnsley (+4.5%).
Search house prices on Zoopla to look up specific streets or postcodes and see what homes sold for, including historical data.
House prices are not going down for the UK as a whole, which has seen a 1.2% annual rise in average sold prices to the start of 2026. However, house prices are going down in local areas that are more expensive, like Worthing (-2.7%), Bournemouth (-2.2%) and Prime Central London (-1.8%).
Mortgage rates have a knock-on effect on house prices because they impact how affordable it is to buy a house. When mortgage rates go up, it is less affordable to get a mortgage. This reduces demand and means sellers have to price more realistically to get interest, which keeps sold house prices lower.
We use official data on sold house prices from HM Land Registry and Registers of Scotland. Our average house prices might be different to others if they use alternative data sources. Others may report on average asking prices, which are much higher than official sold prices.