Facebook
TwitterCC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset contains data on all Real Property parcels that have sold since 2013 in Allegheny County, PA.
Before doing any market analysis on property sales, check the sales validation codes. Many property "sales" are not considered a valid representation of the true market value of the property. For example, when multiple lots are together on one deed with one price they are generally coded as invalid ("H") because the sale price for each parcel ID number indicates the total price paid for a group of parcels, not just for one parcel. See the Sales Validation Codes Dictionary for a complete explanation of valid and invalid sale codes.
Sales Transactions Disclaimer: Sales information is provided from the Allegheny County Department of Administrative Services, Real Estate Division. Content and validation codes are subject to change. Please review the Data Dictionary for details on included fields before each use. Property owners are not required by law to record a deed at the time of sale. Consequently the assessment system may not contain a complete sales history for every property and every sale. You may do a deed search at http://www.alleghenycounty.us/re/index.aspx directly for the most updated information. Note: Ordinance 3478-07 prohibits public access to search assessment records by owner name. It was signed by the Chief Executive in 2007.
Facebook
TwitterFor every real estate property in Arlington which has been sold, this dataset includes property sales information and can be associated with other Real Estate datasets by the RPC (RealEstatePropertyCode).
Facebook
Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Context and Acknowledgements This dataset is inspired by and improves upon the City of New York's NYC Property Sales dataset. The dataset contains a record of every property sold in the New York City property market since 2003 (the first year sales data was first listed on the public record) and updates monthly to include rolling sales.
Please upvote if you found the dataset or additional resources helpful. 👍
Content This dataset contains the location, address, type, sale price, tax category, and sale date of properties sold.
For further reference on the fields in this dataset see the City of New York Department of Finance's Glossary of Terms and Building Codes.
<div></div>
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Update Frequency: Yearly
Access to Residential, Condominium, Commercial, Apartment properties and vacant land sales history data.
To download XML and JSON files, click the CSV option below and click the down arrow next to the Download button in the upper right on its page.
Facebook
TwitterThe Office of the Assessor compiles property sales data to perform an annual property sales study to adjust calculated costs of property values based on local market conditions. This dataset includes property sales data obtained for annual sales studies from 2018 to the present. While only Valid Arm's Length transactions that occurred in the two years prior to when a given sales study is finalized are included in each study, this dataset includes all sales transactions obtained to perform the sales studies, whether or not the sales transactions met inclusion criteria for a study. More information about the Sales Study is available from the Office of the Assessor.Values in categorical fields such as 'Sales Instrument' are recorded based on State of Michigan CAMA standards at the time the value was recorded. Some variation in field value codes occurs over time as a related CAMA standard is updated. CAMA standards are available from the State of Michigan Department of Treasury State Tax Commission.Click here for the Analytics Hub visualization of Property Sales.
Facebook
TwitterUpdate 10/31/2023: Sales are no longer filtered out of this data set based on deed type, sale price, or recency of sale for a given PIN with the same price. If users wish to recreate the former filtering schema they should set sale_filter_same_sale_within_365, sale_filter_less_than_10k, and sale_filter_deed_type to False.
Parcel sales for real property in Cook County, from 1999 to present. The Assessor's Office uses this data in its modeling to estimate the fair market value of unsold properties.
When working with Parcel Index Numbers (PINs) make sure to zero-pad them to 14 digits. Some datasets may lose leading zeros for PINs when downloaded.
Sale document numbers correspond to those of the Cook County Clerk, and can be used on the Clerk's website to find more information about each sale.
NOTE: These sales are filtered, but likely include non-arms-length transactions - sales less than $10,000 along with quit claims, executor deeds, beneficial interests are excluded. While the Data Department will upload what it has access to monthly, sales are reported on a lag, with many records not populating until months after their official recording date.
Current property class codes, their levels of assessment, and descriptions can be found on the Assessor's website. Note that class codes details can change across time.
For more information on the sourcing of attached data and the preparation of this dataset, see the Assessor's Standard Operating Procedures for Open Data on GitHub.
Facebook
TwitterThe Office of Policy and Management maintains a listing of all real estate sales with a sales price of $2,000 or greater that occur between October 1 and September 30 of each year. For each sale record, the file includes: town, property address, date of sale, property type (residential, apartment, commercial, industrial or vacant land), sales price, and property assessment. Data are collected in accordance with Connecticut General Statutes, section 10-261a and 10-261b: https://www.cga.ct.gov/current/pub/chap_172.htm#sec_10-261a and https://www.cga.ct.gov/current/pub/chap_172.htm#sec_10-261b. Annual real estate sales are reported by grand list year (October 1 through September 30 each year). For instance, sales from 2018 GL are from 10/01/2018 through 9/30/2019. Some municipalities may not report data for certain years because when a municipality implements a revaluation, they are not required to submit sales data for the twelve months following implementation.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://www.usa.gov/government-works/https://www.usa.gov/government-works/
The Office of Policy and Management maintains a listing of all real estate sales with a sales price of $2,000 or greater that occur between October 1 and September 30 of each year. For each sale record, the file includes: town, property address, date of sale, property type (residential, apartment, commercial, industrial or vacant land), sales price, and property assessment.
Data are collected in accordance with Connecticut General Statutes, section 10-261a and 10-261b: https://www.cga.ct.gov/current/pub/chap_172.htm#sec_10-261a and https://www.cga.ct.gov/current/pub/chap_172.htm#sec_10-261b. Annual real estate sales are reported by grand list year (October 1 through September 30 each year). For instance, sales from 2018 GL are from 10/01/2018 through 9/30/2019.
| Column Name | Description |
|---|---|
| Serial Number | A unique identifier for each record in the dataset. |
| List Year | The grand list year in which the sale was recorded. |
| Date Recorded | The date when the sale was recorded. |
| Town | The town where the property is located. |
| Address | The address of the property. |
| Assessed Value | The assessed value of the property. |
| Sale Amount | The sales price of the property. |
| Sales Ratio | The sales ratio of the property. |
| Property Type | The type of the property (residential, apartment, commercial, industrial, or vacant land). |
| Residential Type | The type of residential property (if applicable). |
| Non Use Code | The non-use code associated with the property (if applicable). |
| Assessor Remarks | Remarks or comments provided by the assessor (if available). |
| OPM Remarks | Remarks or comments provided by the Office of Policy and Management (if available). |
| Location | The location of the property (if available). |
Facebook
TwitterA polygon depiction of property sales from 2010 to the present that occurred in Stark County, Ohio. The Stark County Auditor's Office (SCAO) maintains records of property sales using a Computer-Assisted Mass Appraisal (CAMA) Database. This layer is a SQL view combining the sales records from the CAMA database with the Stark County parcel layer. A new view is created every morning through a combination of python scripts and SQL stored procedures. The data always reflects the most-recent information available from the previous day for both sources.
Facebook
TwitterApache License, v2.0https://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
License information was derived automatically
Here's a short description of the dataset:
Serial Number: Is just a unique set of digits to identify each transaction
List year: This is the year that the particular property was put up for sale.
Date Recorded: Is the date that the transaction was completed. That is, the year the property was bought.
Town: The town where this property is located.
Address: The property's address.
Assessed Value: How much the property is generally considered to be worth.
Sale Amount: How much the property was actually sold for.
Sales Ratio: The ratio measures how close the selling price of the property is to it's assessed value.
Property Type: What kind of property it is.
Residential Type: If it is a residential property, what type is it.
Years until sold: Number of years before the property was finally sold
This dataset can be used for analysis and even machine learning projects. For those doing analysis, I invite you to try and answer these questions: * Average assessed value of properties from year to year? * Average sale amount of properties from year to year? * Average sales ratio of properties from year to year? * How long, on average, did it take for the different property types to get sold? * How long, on average, did it take for the different residential types to get sold? * Which towns saw the most property sales in 2021?
For those more interested in using this dataset in machine learning projects to forecast future property prices, I invite you also. Let's learn from your work.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
All data compiled into this dataset is available under public domain. This set is designed to provide some insight into sales trends across the state of Connecticut as well as the individual towns within. It is also specifically structured to highlight changes in trends due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
list_year: grand list year of the property (grand list years run from Oct. 1 through Sept. 30). town: name of the town that the property was sold in. population: population of the town that the property was sold in. residential_type: single family, two family, three family, four family, or condo. month: the month the sale was recorded. year: the year the sale was recorded. in_pandemic: boolean value indicating whether the selling date was after March 11, 2020. assessed_value: tax assessed value of the property at the time of the sale. sale_amount: final closing sale amount of the property. price_index: the Consumer Price Index (CPI) for that month/year. Used to normalize dollar values. norm_assessed_value: CPI-normalized assessed value (assessed_value / price_index * 100). norm_sale_amount: CPI-normalized sale amount (sale_amount / price_index * 100). norm_sales_ratio: CPI-normalized assessment to sale ratio (norm_assessed_value / norm_sale_amount). latitude: latitude for the property's town. longitude: longitude for the property's town.
Note: the original dataset also contained the street address and exact sale date for each record. Those variables were removed as they were not relevant to the analysis being conducted and to afford the individuals associated with each sale a stonger degree of personal privacy. Records from October 2000 to October 2010 from the original dataset were omitted due to timeliness issues. Records of non-residential types were omitted as they lacked enough historic records to be of consequence to the analysis.
Real estate records: https://data.ct.gov/Housing-and-Development/Real-Estate-Sales-2001-2020-GL/5mzw-sjtu Township shapes: https://data.ct.gov/Government/Town-Boundary-Index-Map/evyv-fqzg Consumer price index: https://www.bls.gov/regions/new-england/data/consumerpriceindex_us_table.htm Town populations: https://www.connecticut-demographics.com/cities_by_population
Facebook
TwitterOur Price Paid Data includes information on all property sales in England and Wales that are sold for value and are lodged with us for registration.
Get up to date with the permitted use of our Price Paid Data:
check what to consider when using or publishing our Price Paid Data
If you use or publish our Price Paid Data, you must add the following attribution statement:
Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right 2021. This data is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Price Paid Data is released under the http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/">Open Government Licence (OGL). You need to make sure you understand the terms of the OGL before using the data.
Under the OGL, HM Land Registry permits you to use the Price Paid Data for commercial or non-commercial purposes. However, OGL does not cover the use of third party rights, which we are not authorised to license.
Price Paid Data contains address data processed against Ordnance Survey’s AddressBase Premium product, which incorporates Royal Mail’s PAF® database (Address Data). Royal Mail and Ordnance Survey permit your use of Address Data in the Price Paid Data:
If you want to use the Address Data in any other way, you must contact Royal Mail. Email address.management@royalmail.com.
The following fields comprise the address data included in Price Paid Data:
The October 2025 release includes:
As we will be adding to the October data in future releases, we would not recommend using it in isolation as an indication of market or HM Land Registry activity. When the full dataset is viewed alongside the data we’ve previously published, it adds to the overall picture of market activity.
Your use of Price Paid Data is governed by conditions and by downloading the data you are agreeing to those conditions.
Google Chrome (Chrome 88 onwards) is blocking downloads of our Price Paid Data. Please use another internet browser while we resolve this issue. We apologise for any inconvenience caused.
We update the data on the 20th working day of each month. You can download the:
These include standard and additional price paid data transactions received at HM Land Registry from 1 January 1995 to the most current monthly data.
Your use of Price Paid Data is governed by conditions and by downloading the data you are agreeing to those conditions.
The data is updated monthly and the average size of this file is 3.7 GB, you can download:
Facebook
TwitterThis dataset has been published by the Office of the Real Estate Assessor of the City of Virginia Beach and data.virginiabeach.gov. The mission of data.virginiabeach.gov is to provide timely and accurate City information to increase government transparency and access to useful and well organized data by the general public, non-governmental organizations, and City of Virginia Beach employees.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
Description:
Features:
Date: The date when the property transaction occurred. Year: The year of the property transaction. Locality: The locality or area where the property is located. Estimated Value: The estimated value of the property. Sale Price: The actual sale price of the property. Property: The type of property (e.g., Single Family). Residential: Indicates whether the property is residential or not. Num_rooms: The number of rooms in the property. Num_bathrooms: The number of bathrooms in the property. Carpet Area: The carpet area of the property. Property Tax Rate: The property tax rate applicable to the property. Face: The facing direction of the property (e.g., North, South, East).
Facebook
TwitterThe number of U.S. home sales in the United States declined in 2024, after soaring in 2021. A total of four million transactions of existing homes, including single-family, condo, and co-ops, were completed in 2024, down from 6.12 million in 2021. According to the forecast, the housing market is forecast to head for recovery in 2025, despite transaction volumes expected to remain below the long-term average. Why have home sales declined? The housing boom during the coronavirus pandemic has demonstrated that being a homeowner is still an integral part of the American dream. Nevertheless, sentiment declined in the second half of 2022 and Americans across all generations agreed that the time was not right to buy a home. A combination of factors has led to house prices rocketing and making homeownership unaffordable for the average buyer. A survey among owners and renters found that the high home prices and unfavorable economic conditions were the two main barriers to making a home purchase. People who would like to purchase their own home need to save up a deposit, have a good credit score, and a steady and sufficient income to be approved for a mortgage. In 2022, mortgage rates experienced the most aggressive increase in history, making the total cost of homeownership substantially higher. Are U.S. home prices expected to fall? The median sales price of existing homes stood at 413,000 U.S. dollars in 2024 and was forecast to increase slightly until 2026. The development of the S&P/Case Shiller U.S. National Home Price Index shows that home prices experienced seven consecutive months of decline between June 2022 and January 2023, but this trend reversed in the following months. Despite mild fluctuations throughout the year, home prices in many metros are forecast to continue to grow, albeit at a much slower rate.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domainhttps://fred.stlouisfed.org/legal/#copyright-public-domain
Graph and download economic data for Median Sales Price of Houses Sold for the United States (MSPUS) from Q1 1963 to Q2 2025 about sales, median, housing, and USA.
Facebook
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.
Facebook
Twitterhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
This dataset is a record of every building or building unit (apartment, etc.) sold in the New York City property market over a 12-month period.
This dataset contains the location, address, type, sale price, and sale date of building units sold. A reference on the trickier fields:
BOROUGH: A digit code for the borough the property is located in; in order these are Manhattan (1), Bronx (2), Brooklyn (3), Queens (4), and Staten Island (5).BLOCK; LOT: The combination of borough, block, and lot forms a unique key for property in New York City. Commonly called a BBL.BUILDING CLASS AT PRESENT and BUILDING CLASS AT TIME OF SALE: The type of building at various points in time. See the glossary linked to below.For further reference on individual fields see the Glossary of Terms. For the building classification codes see the Building Classifications Glossary.
Note that because this is a financial transaction dataset, there are some points that need to be kept in mind:
This dataset is a concatenated and slightly cleaned-up version of the New York City Department of Finance's Rolling Sales dataset.
What can you discover about New York City real estate by looking at a year's worth of raw transaction records? Can you spot trends in the market, or build a model that predicts sale value in the future?
Facebook
TwitterAttribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
Existing Home Sales in the United States increased to 4100 Thousand in October from 4050 Thousand in September of 2025. This dataset provides the latest reported value for - United States Existing Home Sales - plus previous releases, historical high and low, short-term forecast and long-term prediction, economic calendar, survey consensus and news.
Facebook
TwitterThese National Statistics provide monthly estimates of the number of residential and non-residential property transactions in the UK and its constituent countries. National Statistics are accredited official statistics.
England and Northern Ireland statistics are based on information submitted to the HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC) Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) database by taxpayers on SDLT returns.
Land and Buildings Transaction Tax (LBTT) replaced SDLT in Scotland from 1 April 2015 and this data is provided to HMRC by https://www.revenue.scot/">Revenue Scotland to continue the time series.
Land Transaction Tax (LTT) replaced SDLT in Wales from 1 April 2018. To continue the time series, the https://gov.wales/welsh-revenue-authority">Welsh Revenue Authority (WRA) have provided HMRC with a monthly data feed of LTT transactions since July 2021.
LTT figures for the latest month are estimated using a grossing factor based on data for the most recent and complete financial year. Until June 2021, LTT transactions for the latest month were estimated by HMRC based upon year on year growth in line with other UK nations.
LTT transactions up to the penultimate month are aligned with LTT statistics.
Go to Stamp Duty Land Tax guidance for the latest rates and information.
Go to Stamp Duty Land Tax rates from 1 December 2003 to 22 September 2022 and Stamp Duty: rates on land transfers before December 2003 for historic rates.
Further details for this statistical release, including data suitability and coverage, are included within the ‘Monthly property transactions completed in the UK with value of £40,000 or above’ quality report.
The latest release was published 09:30 28 November 2025 and was updated with provisional data from completed transactions during October 2025.
The next release will be published 09:30 09 January 2026 and will be updated with provisional data from completed transactions during November 2025.
https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20240320184933/https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/monthly-property-transactions-completed-in-the-uk-with-value-40000-or-above">Archive versions of the Monthly property transactions completed in the UK with value of £40,000 or above are available via the UK Government Web Archive, from the National Archives.
Facebook
TwitterCC0 1.0 Universal Public Domain Dedicationhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset contains data on all Real Property parcels that have sold since 2013 in Allegheny County, PA.
Before doing any market analysis on property sales, check the sales validation codes. Many property "sales" are not considered a valid representation of the true market value of the property. For example, when multiple lots are together on one deed with one price they are generally coded as invalid ("H") because the sale price for each parcel ID number indicates the total price paid for a group of parcels, not just for one parcel. See the Sales Validation Codes Dictionary for a complete explanation of valid and invalid sale codes.
Sales Transactions Disclaimer: Sales information is provided from the Allegheny County Department of Administrative Services, Real Estate Division. Content and validation codes are subject to change. Please review the Data Dictionary for details on included fields before each use. Property owners are not required by law to record a deed at the time of sale. Consequently the assessment system may not contain a complete sales history for every property and every sale. You may do a deed search at http://www.alleghenycounty.us/re/index.aspx directly for the most updated information. Note: Ordinance 3478-07 prohibits public access to search assessment records by owner name. It was signed by the Chief Executive in 2007.