logo
Northern Ireland house prices rise by 10% at start of year

Northern Ireland house prices rise by 10% at start of year

BBC News21-05-2025

House prices in Northern Ireland rose by an annual rate of almost 10% in the first quarter of 2025.The average price was just over £185,000 compared to £169,000 in the same period last year, according to official data.On a quarterly basis prices rose 1% from £183,000 in the fourth quarter of 2024.An increase in stamp duty in April is likely to have boosted the market in the first quarter of this year as buyers rushed to complete transactions before the change.
Stamp duty is a tax on property transactions which is set at different rates depending on the value of the house.Up until April stamp duty did not apply to houses worth up to £250,000 but that threshold has now been dropped to £125,000.Cuts in interest rates may also have boosted the market as lower rates mean people can afford to borrow more.Prices rose in all local council areas on an annual basis, ranging from 5.2% in Mid Ulster to more than 15% in Causeway Coast and Glens.The average price in Causeway Coast and Glens is now above £200,000, the first time it has been at that level since the peak of Northern Ireland's housing bubble in 2007.The highest average price is £221,000 in Lisburn and Castlereagh, the lowest is £165,000 in Mid and East Antrim.Annual price rises were also recorded across all property types ranging from 8% for detached houses to almost 11% for terraces.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Ex-BBC star is fined £600 for leaving scene of an accident after her Range Rover crashed into Mazda which ended up in a ditch
EXCLUSIVE Ex-BBC star is fined £600 for leaving scene of an accident after her Range Rover crashed into Mazda which ended up in a ditch

Daily Mail​

time2 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Ex-BBC star is fined £600 for leaving scene of an accident after her Range Rover crashed into Mazda which ended up in a ditch

A former BBC star has been fined £600 - but will keep her driving licence - after leaving the scene of a car crash that left a driver injured in a ditch. Karen Patterson, 54, was one of the most famous faces in Northern Ireland having spent 20 years at the Beeb including a decade as a presenter on Good Morning Ulster. But she left the corporation five years ago to become a dairy farmer. On March 16 last year, the Range Rover being driven by the former journalist collided with a Mazda MX5 sports car on the Newtownards Road in Comber - a town on the northern edge of Strangford Lough. The Mazda driver told police that as he was overtaking Ms Patterson's 4x4, she moved across and hit him, sending him off the road. Her victim suffered an injured wrist and some hearing loss after developing tinnitus. Ms Patterson pleaded guilty to the offences of careless driving, failing to report and failing to remain at the scene of an accident. The 54-year-old was sentenced at Newtownards Magistrates Court yesterday and handed handed £600 of fines plus six penalty points on her driving licence. But she contested a charge of causing grievous bodily injury by careless driving - and the judge in the case sided with her. Representing the former broadcaster, her defence lawyer Conan Rea told the court that the Mazda driver's injuries to his wrist and hearing could not constitute grievous bodily injury. Mr Rea said his client had seen the Mazda 'travelling at some speed behind her' - but then lost sight of the sportscar. The cars bumped but she drove on, however, she claimed that she then went back and could not see the Mazda or any sign of the crash so went home - without calling the police. The barrister said the former BBC breakfast host now realised that she should have called the Police Service of Northern Ireland, even though she could not locate the Mazda. Mr Rees said that she had very quickly admitted the offences of leaving the scene of the accident and to careless driving. District Judge Mark Hamill found her not guilty causing grievous bodily injury by careless driving. Judge Hamill said that while the case could go to civil court, in his view the injuries suffered by the Mazda driver 'do not come near to GBI.' He also spared her a driving ban, by giving her six penalty points on her licence. She had three points already, meaning the punishment kept her below the 12 points needed for a ban from the roads. Her barrister had told the court that she has to drive between her home and the family farm to milk the cows each day, meaning a driving ban would have caused her 'considerable difficulties', according to the Belfast Newsletter newspaper. The judge imposed £600 of fines, a £15 offender levy and six penalty points. Karen joined the BBC in 2000 after working for the Bangor Spectator and Downtown-Cool FM, where she covered the 1998 Omagh bombing. She then went to BBC Newsline and then Good Morning Ulster but left in 2020 to returning to her first love, farming. She said at the time that dairy cows had been in her family's blood. She grew up on a dairy farm in County Down, which her father had farmed since 1947. 'I'm quite excited about it, I've been here for 20 years and it's been an amazing journey, but just to be able to pick projects and do things at a bit of a different pace', she said at the time.

Tell us: have you recently succeeded in buying a home in a UK holiday hotspot?
Tell us: have you recently succeeded in buying a home in a UK holiday hotspot?

The Guardian

time7 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Tell us: have you recently succeeded in buying a home in a UK holiday hotspot?

House prices in various UK holiday hotspots have plunged since some local authorities have introduced higher council tax charges on second homes or holiday lets, and many owners of such properties have put their homes on the market. Despite lower prices for homes in areas such as coastal Cornwall, Dorset, parts of Wales and other UK resorts, many homeowners have been struggling to sell in these areas – even though borrowing has become cheaper and UK lenders have relaxed their mortgage stress tests following changes to Bank of England guidance in March. We'd like to hear from people who have been trying to buy a home in one of the UK's popular holiday areas. Have properties in your area become affordable for you in recent months? If you have actively been trying to buy a property in such an area but have not yet succeeded, tell us why. We're also keen to hear from people who have recently bought a property in a popular UK resort, whether a first home, primary residence, second home or investment property. Share your experience or concerns. Finally, we'd like to hear from people who have been trying to sell their second home or holiday let in such an area recently. Tell us about your recent experience of trying to buy a home in a UK holiday resort, whether properties have become affordable for you or not in such areas, and if you've recently bought a property in such an area. Please include as much detail as possible Please include as much detail as possible Please include as much detail as possible Please include as much detail as possible Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB. Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. If you include other people's names please ask them first. Contact us on WhatsApp at +447766780300. For more information, please see our guidance on contacting us via WhatsApp. For true anonymity please use our SecureDrop service instead. If you're having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.

Crumlin Road Gaol and courthouse: Contrasting fortunes of two listed Belfast buildings
Crumlin Road Gaol and courthouse: Contrasting fortunes of two listed Belfast buildings

BBC News

time11 hours ago

  • BBC News

Crumlin Road Gaol and courthouse: Contrasting fortunes of two listed Belfast buildings

On a street in north Belfast, two Victorian buildings with colourful histories sit facing each other. The Crumlin Road Courthouse and the Crumlin Road Gaol have had very contrasting fortunes since they both closed in the jail, which is owned by the Department for Infrastructure, has been transformed into a popular tourist attraction, a conference and wedding venue and is also now home to a whiskey on the other side of the road the courthouse lies empty and derelict. It has suffered numerous arson attacks and is a shell of its former self, with weeds and trees growing where its roof once new plans have now been submitted for a mixed-use development which could turn it into a hospitality, tourism, educational and commercial space. Both buildings were constructed in the mid-19th Century and designed by the architect Sir Charles courthouse has changed hands a number of times since it closed in 1998 but various development plans have failed to get off the new owners are hoping their proposals will prove more plans include the restoration of the Victorian front of the building and the recreation of one of its courtrooms.A tunnel beneath the road, which connected the courthouse to the jail, would be reinstated and there would be a partial demolition and new build to the rear. Sustainability Johann Muldoon, from Manor Architects, is involved in the new scheme."For most of our heritage in Northern Ireland, we see all these proposals, but they really struggle to find a sustainable use that is economically viable," she said. "That is why I think a lot of our heritage seems to degrade."She hopes the mixed use plan for the site might improve its chances. "Why we have those proposed uses is to balance what we've got in terms of heritage offering, in terms of a tourism, against the commercial viability and the sustainability of it all." The sorry state of the courthouse stands in contrast to Crumlin Road Gaol on the other side of the former inmates included the likes of former Irish taoiseach (prime minister) Eamon De Valera, former Northern Ireland first minister Ian Paisley and IRA hunger striker Bobby Sands. It closed as a working prison in 1996 and is now a popular tourist attraction where the public can visit the cells and learn about its history. Local historian Tom Liggett, who used to give tours of the jail, thinks it is essential that its past is never forgotten."While there are people who take a stance that all this should be destroyed and you should forget about it, I wouldn't agree with that," he said."I think local history is told from our perspective - a working-class perspective - and it's hidden and it shouldn't be hidden." Last year a whiskey distillery opened in one of the Kelly, chief executive of McConnell's Irish Whisky Distillery, was among those behind the development. "A wing lay derelict for many, many years, and we saw the opportunity of bringing the McConnell's story, dating back to 1776, into a wonderful heritage listed building," he said. "For us, it's three parts of the business: it's the brand, it's the distillery and it's a wonderful tourist attraction." Storytelling So can the courthouse learn anything from its opposite neighbour and should we as a society do more to protect our built heritage?Rita Harkin, the Architectural Heritage Fund's development manager for Northern Ireland, said: "We have to be able to use these buildings to tell our stories. "And that's a reflection of a city and a place that it's grown in confidence, to be able to look honestly at our past to use that to move forward."You can hear more on this story by listening to the latest episode of Red Lines.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store