Benham and Reeves analysed demand for homes valued between £2-£10 million and £10 million and above based on the ratio of properties listed online that have already sold subject to contract or gone under offer. E.g, if 100 homes are listed and 50 are already sold, the demand score would be 50%.
Prime Market - £2m-£10m
Across the core prime market, buyer demand has edged up marginally in the third quarter of this year, increasing by 0.2% to 25%, building further on the positive growth seen in Q1, but more notable, increasing by 2.4% on an annual basis.
Barnes (67.5%), Chiswick (57.1%) and Wandsworth (53.1%) are home to the current highest demand for prime properties.
Barnes has also seen the largest spike in demand versus Q2, with a 16.7% increase. Hampstead has seen the second largest increase at 7.9%, followed by Chiswick (6%). Islington has seen the largest quarterly decline with demand down -8.1% versus the second quarter of this year, along with Holland Park (-5.4%) and Maida Vale (-4.3%).
On an annual basis, Barnes again proves the most popular spot for prime property buyers, with demand up 23.2% versus last year. Canary Wharf has also seen one of the largest annual upticks (+17.2%), as has Battersea (14.9%).
Super Prime Market - £10m+
For the second quarter in a row, demand across the super prime market has fallen by 1%, down 1.9% when compared to this time last year.
Wimbledon is the hottest spot in London’s super-prime market with current demand at 25%, followed by Highgate (16.7%) and Belgravia (13.8%).
Holland Park has seen the largest quarterly increase in demand at 4.8%, with Regents Park (+4.3%) and St John’s Wood (3.6%) also making the top three largest increases in quarterly buyer demand levels.
In terms of the largest annual boost to market activity, Highgate again tops the table with a +16.7% increase, followed by Belgravia (10.5%) and Victoria (8.6%).
Marc von Grundherr, Director of Benham and Reeves, commented: “The London market may have failed to benefit from the same stamp duty spark that set the wider UK property market ablaze, but we have seen a consistent performance of late and signs of a slow but steady return to health.
"This has been no different across the prime London market and a rejuvenated level of foreign interest has certainly helped to spearhead this increase in market activity.
"However, the super prime market has yet to enjoy the same uplift and buyer demand remains down on both last quarter and this time last year. However, a weak pound now means that many foreign buyers are benefitting from a dramatic boost in purchasing power and while this is bad news for the wider economy, it could see prime London sales start to climb over the coming months.”