The rising value of royal residences

The royal family has one of the most impressive property portfolios in the world, including buildings such as Windsor Castle, Buckingham Palace, and the Tower of London. New research looks at ten of their most famous residences and reveals how much they have grown in value over the past year.

Related topics:  Property,  House Prices,  Royal
Property | Reporter
5th May 2023
Buckingham Palace 725
"There’s no bricks-and-mortar portfolio as impressive as the royal family and the estimated worth of just 10 of the most famous properties they own is quite staggering, to say the least"

Estate agent comparison site, GetAgent analysed the estimated market value of 10 of royal residences that sit as the jewels in the crown of the royal family’s property portfolio and found that the current combined market value of Buckingham Palace, Hampton Court Palace, the Tower of London, St James’s Palace, Window Castle, Kensington Palace, Clarence House, Sandringham, Holyroodhouse and Balmoral is a staggering £7.5bn.

The 1.7% annual increase in the total value of these 10 royal residences seen over the last year has boosted this royal property portfolio to the tune of £125m.

The undisputed jewel in the crown of the royal’s property portfolio is Buckingham Palace with an estimated value of £3.9bn, followed by Hampton Court (£1bn) and The Tower of London (£711m).

However, when it comes to the best-performing royal residence where property price appreciation is concerned, it’s Balmoral that ranks top, having increased in value by 18% over the last year alone.

The value of Sandringham is up 8% in the last year alone, while Holyroodhouse has climbed by 6% since this time last year.

Co-founder and CEO of GetAgent.co.uk, Colby Short, commented:

“There’s no bricks-and-mortar portfolio as impressive as the royal family and the estimated worth of just 10 of the most famous properties they own is quite staggering, to say the least.

"However, much like the regular market, the royals are susceptible to the fragmented nature of the UK property market and so while the hotter market conditions in Scotland have seen Balmoral steam ahead where annual price growth is concerned, the slower market of central London has seen the likes of Buckingham Palace, Clarence House and St James’s Palace creep up by just 0.3% in the last year.

"Despite the overall slower market conditions that we’ve seen in recent months, a marginal 1.7% increase across these 10 royal residences has been enough to add a staggering £125m to the combined value of these 10 properties.”

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