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TwitterThe average house price in Northern Ireland has increased since 2015, with minor fluctuations over time. The house price index is calculated using data on housing transactions and measures the development of house prices, with 2023 chosen as a base year when the index value was set to 100. In May 2025, the house price index reached 113.9, meaning that house prices have grown by nearly 14 percent since January 2023 and 9.5 percent since the same month a year ago. Among the different regions in the UK, the West and East Midlands experienced the strongest growth.
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TwitterQuarterly statistics on house prices based on sales completed in Northern Ireland during Jan - Mar 2020.
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TwitterThe average house price in Belfast has increased since 2015, with minor fluctuations over time. The house price index is calculated using data on housing transactions and measures the development of house prices, with January 2023 chosen as a base year when the index value was set to 100. In May 2025, the house price index reached 114.1, meaning that house prices have grown by 14.1 percent since 2023 and 10 percent since the same month in 2024. Among the different regions in the UK, the West and East Midlands experienced the strongest growth.
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TwitterHouse price index and standardised prices in Northern Ireland during Oct - Dec 2020. The figures in this release are used as the NI component of the UK House Price Index.
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TwitterThe house price index in London reached 99.1 index points in May 2025, which was an increase of 2.2 percent year on year. The house price index (HPI) is an easy way of illustrating trends in the house sales market and help simplify house purchase decisions. By using hedonic regression, the index models property price data for all dwellings and shows how much the price has changed since January 2023. Average house prices in Londnon boroughs Location plays a huge role in the price of a home. Kensington and Chelsea and City of Westminster are undoubtedly the most expensive boroughs in London, with an average house price that can exceed one million British pounds. In comparison, a house in Barking and Dagenham cost approximately one third. Nevertheless, the housing market is the busiest in the boroughs with average house prices. How have regional house prices in the UK developed? House prices in other UK regions have risen even more than in London. In Northern Ireland, the house price index reached nearly 120 index points in May 2025, ranking it among the regions with the highest property appreciation. The UK house price index stood at 103 index points, suggesting an increase of 51 percent since 2015.
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TwitterThis statistic shows the total verified sales of residential properties in Northern Ireland from 2007 to the third quarter of 2020. It can be seen that pre-recession, total sales amounted to over ** thousand annually in 2007. Afterwards the number decreased, but rising trends could again be observed in 2011. There were approximately ****** housing sales reported for 2019 and less than the half in the first three quarters of 2020.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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Annual descriptive price statistics for each calendar year 2005 – 2020 for 462 electoral wards within 11 Local Government Districts.
The statistics include:
• Minimum sale price
• Lower quartile sale price
• Median sale price
• Simple Mean sale price
• Upper Quartile sale price
• Maximum sale price
• Number of verified sales
Prices are available where at least 30 sales were recorded in the area within the calendar year which could be included in the regression model i.e. the following sales are excluded:
• Non Arms-Length sales
• sales of properties where the habitable space are less than 30m2 or greater than 1000m2
• sales less than £20,000.
Annual median or simple mean prices should not be used to calculate the property price change over time.
The quality (where quality refers to the combination of all characteristics of a residential property, both physical and locational) of the properties that are sold may differ from one time period to another. For example, sales in one quarter could be disproportionately skewed towards low-quality properties, therefore producing a biased estimate of average price.
The median and simple mean prices are not ‘standardised’ and so the varying mix of properties sold in each quarter could give a false impression of the actual change in prices. In order to calculate the pure property price change over time it is necessary to compare like with like, and this can only be achieved if the ‘characteristics-mix’ of properties traded is standardised. To calculate pure property change over time please use the standardised prices in the NI House Price Index Detailed Statistics file.
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TwitterDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, the number of house sales in the UK spiked, followed by a period of decline. In 2023 and 2024, the housing market slowed notably, and in January 2025, transaction volumes fell to 46,774. House sales volumes are impacted by a number of factors, including mortgage rates, house prices, supply, demand, as well as the overall health of the market. The economic uncertainty and rising unemployment rates has also affected the homebuyer sentiment of Brits. How have UK house prices developed over the past 10 years? House prices in the UK have increased year-on-year since 2015, except for a brief period of decline in the second half of 2023 and the beginning of 2024. That is based on the 12-month percentage change of the UK house price index. At the peak of the housing boom in 2022, prices soared by nearly 14 percent. The decline that followed was mild, at under three percent. The cooling in the market was more pronounced in England and Wales, where the average house price declined in 2023. Conversely, growth in Scotland and Northern Ireland continued. What is the impact of mortgage rates on house sales? For a long period, mortgage rates were at record-low, allowing prospective homebuyers to take out a 10-year loan at a mortgage rate of less than three percent. In the last quarter of 2021, this period came to an end as the Bank of England rose the bank lending rate to contain the spike in inflation. Naturally, the higher borrowing costs affected consumer sentiment, urging many homebuyers to place their plans on hold and leading to a decline in sales.
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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NI Water Annual Information Return 2020 2021 Table 13 Non Financial Measures Sewerage Properties and Population
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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NI Water Annual Information Return 2020 2021 Table 7 Non Financial Measures Water Properties and Population
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
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NI Water Annual Information Return - Non Financial Measures Sewerage Properties & Population 2019 2020
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TwitterNI Water Annual Information Return 2019 2020 Table 13 Non Financial Measures Sewerage Properties & Population
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TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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United Kingdom PHRPI: Northern Ireland data was reported at 110.115 Jan2015=100 in Jul 2020. This stayed constant from the previous number of 110.115 Jan2015=100 for Jun 2020. United Kingdom PHRPI: Northern Ireland data is updated monthly, averaging 104.530 Jan2015=100 from Jan 2015 (Median) to Jul 2020, with 67 observations. The data reached an all-time high of 110.115 Jan2015=100 in Jul 2020 and a record low of 99.984 Jan2015=100 in Feb 2015. United Kingdom PHRPI: Northern Ireland data remains active status in CEIC and is reported by Office for National Statistics. The data is categorized under Global Database’s United Kingdom – Table UK.EB015: Private Housing Rental Prices Index: January 2015=100.
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NI Water Annual Information Return 2019 2020 Table 7 Non Financial Measures Water Properties & Population (TOTAL)
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Twitterhttps://eidc.ceh.ac.uk/licences/lcm-raster/plainhttps://eidc.ceh.ac.uk/licences/lcm-raster/plain
This is a 25m pixel data set representing the land surface of Northern Ireland, classified into 21 UKCEH land cover classes, based upon Biodiversity Action Plan broad habitats. It is a three-band raster in GeoTiff format, produced by rasterising three properties of the classified land parcels dataset. The first band gives the most likely land cover type; the second band gives the per-parcel probability of the land cover, the third band is a measure of parcel purity. The probability and purity bands (scaled 0 to 100) combine to give an indication of uncertainty. A full description of this and all UKCEH LCM2020 products are available from the LCM2020 product documentation.
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TwitterThe average house price in Northern Ireland has increased since 2015, with minor fluctuations over time. The house price index is calculated using data on housing transactions and measures the development of house prices, with 2023 chosen as a base year when the index value was set to 100. In May 2025, the house price index reached 113.9, meaning that house prices have grown by nearly 14 percent since January 2023 and 9.5 percent since the same month a year ago. Among the different regions in the UK, the West and East Midlands experienced the strongest growth.