While cautious buyers and a dip in transaction levels have characterised much of the UK property market in recent months, one sector remains resolutely buoyant. Sales of London’s most prestigious super-prime properties, priced at £10m or more, have bucked the slowdown, seemingly resistant to prevailing economic headwinds.
According to Frances McDonald, director of residential research at Savills, during 2022 sales of homes across London priced at £10m and above rose by 17% compared to 2021. Sales of homes priced between £10m and £15m increased by 25%, while those in the £15m-£20m bracket saw a 42% rise. Although the number of sales in Q1 2023 declined compared with the same period in 2022, a residual effect of the autumn mini-budget, the general direction is clear: sales of properties priced at £10m and over remain above their pre-pandemic levels and have risen by 50% compared to Q1 2019.
It was a very different picture across London as a whole, according to Nationwide, with the capital registering some of the weakest annual price growth of the UK’s 13 regions throughout 2022. Property prices in the city fell by 2.2% in the first quarter of 2023, although a surprise 0.5% price rise across the UK in April 2023 offers hope of a recovery.
Why have London homes priced over £10m proved so resilient? “While we have seen increased caution across all price ranges, it’s always been clear that the wealthiest buyers are not as affected by fluctuations in interest rates and the cost of living,” explains Pete Bevan, director of residential sales in Savills Kensington office. “The £10m-plus market is driven largely by sentiment.”