The figures form part of new research from London lettings and estate agent, Benham and Reeves, who analysed sold price records from the Land Registry for sales at, or over, the £1m threshold so far this year (January to June - latest available). They also compared this £1m market activity to the same timeframe in 2012, to see how the market has changed in the last 10 years.
£1m market activity
The research shows that so far this year, 6,732 property purchases have been completed with a price tag of £1m or more. This is a 93% increase when compared to 2012.
In terms of sheer volume, London remains the nation’s £1m market hotspot, with 3,342 million pound sales so far in 2022. The South East is the only other region to see this total exceed the 1,000 mark.
However, in terms of the biggest increase in £1m purchases in the last decade, the North East ranks top. Despite being the most affordable region, 525% more £1m property sales have taken place so far this year versus a decade ago.
Wales has seen a 420% increase, with the West Midlands (338%), North West (313%) and South West (300%) also enjoying an increase of 300% or more.
At the local authority level, there has now been a sale for £1m or more in 79% of areas in England and Wales, up 27% from the 52% of areas in 2012.
£1m sold prices
While the volume of £1m+ sales has increased in the last 10 years, the research by Benham and Reeves shows that the average sold price has dropped slightly. In 2012, the average sold price for homes purchased for £1m or more was £1.425m, today it sits at £1.35m - a drop of -5%.
Just the North East (+6%), the South West, North West and West Midlands (+5%) have bucked this topline trend, while in the East of England, the average price paid has remained static.
Total market value
Despite this change in the average price paid for a £1m+ property, the sharp uplift in transaction volume has boosted the total value of £1m+ market considerably. A decade ago, £1m+ transactions generated just shy of £6.5bn during the first six months of 2012. So far this year, this total sits at almost £11.3bn - a 75% jump.
Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, commented: “The higher end of the property market hasn’t been susceptible to the same drastic levels of house price appreciation seen across lower price thresholds in recent years, as it simply isn’t driven by the same high volume of homes changing hands.
"However, what we have seen is that high rates of house price appreciation are tipping many homes, in many areas, over the one million pound threshold.
"A decade ago, a home was sold for one million pounds or more in just over half of local authorities in England and Wales. So far this year, 79% of areas have seen a home purchased at this price or above and this really demonstrates just how much the market has changed.”