CONCRETE JUNGLE: LONDON BUYERS FACE STIFF COMPETITION FOR A PROPERTY WITH A GARDEN, AS FOUR OUT OF TEN DON’T HAVE ONE

  • Just a third (34%) of listings in the London borough of Tower Hamlets have gardens, compared to Bexley and Bromley, where more than four out of five properties on the market have green space
  • Across the UK’s towns and cities, just under a third (31.4%) of properties for sale do not have a garden
  • Grimsby is the garden capital of the UK, with 93% of properties on the market having an outside space
  • Of the UK’s ten major cities, Liverpool ranks the lowest, with just 60% of listings boasting gardens, whilst Bristol comes out on top (80%)

London, 13 March 2017 – A garden is likely to be on many London buyers’ wish lists, but new research by online estate agents HouseSimple.com reveals they could face stiff competition as four out of 10 (39.5%) properties currently on the market in the capital don’t have an outside space.

Not surprisingly, gardens are sparse in many Zone 1 areas of London, with just a third of properties on the market in Tower Hamlets having an outside space. You are more likely to find a property with a garden if you head to the outer boroughs. Top of the tree are the boroughs of Bexley and Bromley. More than four out of five properties currently for sale in Bexley (85.4 %) and Bromley (84.2%) have a garden.

Across the UK’s towns and cities, almost a third (31.4%) of properties on the market do not have access to a garden. If you consider yourself green fingered, steer clear of Gateshead as more than half (55.1%) of the properties on sale in the town lack a back garden. Three out of the five worst UK towns and cities for outside space are in the north west of England, and eight of ten of the worst cities are in north England.

Contrast that with the coastal town of Grimsby, in Yorkshire and the Humber, which is the garden capital of the UK based on current property listings, with 93% of properties for sale boasting gardens.

The following table shows the top five and bottom five London boroughs in terms of properties currently being marketed that have a garden:

Borough Total properties on the market % of properties on the market with a garden
Tower Hamlets 2944 34.4%
City of Westminster 3441 38.4%
Hackney 1258 39.7%
Islington 1382 41.0%
Camden 2194 45.7%
Bexley 526 85.4%
Bromley 1448 84.2%
Havering 695 82.7%
Hillingdon 1353 81.1%
Redbridge 1021 79.6%

The following table shows the top five and bottom five UK towns and cities in terms of properties currently being marketed that have a garden:

Town/City Region Total properties on the market % of properties on the market with a garden
Gateshead North East 296 44.9%
Salford North West 551 56.3%
Bootle North West 290 56.6%
Hastings South East 447 57.7%
Liverpool North West 5686 59.6%
Grimsby Yorkshire and the Humber 314 93.0%
Crawley South East 328 91.2%
Chesterfield East Midlands 915 88.3%
Southport North West 485 87.6%
Barnsley Yorkshire and the Humber 418 86.4%
  1. Towns and cities with less than 200 properties listed on the market at the time of research not included in the research

Looking at the top 10 UK cities with the largest populations, Liverpool (59.6%), London (60.5%) and Manchester (62.8%) rank the lowest in terms of properties on the market with gardens. Meanwhile Bristol leaves them green with envy, as close to 80% of properties listed for sale have outside space.

The following table shows the top 10 major UK cities in terms of population size and the percentage of current listings that have a garden:

Town/City Region Total properties on the market % of properties on the market with a garden
Liverpool North West 5686 59.6%
London South East 54013 60.5%
Manchester North West 2101 62.8%
Glasgow Scotland 1730 68.5%
Bradford West Yorkshire 1436 71.0%
Leeds West Yorkshire 1774 75.0%
Birmingham West Midlands 2965 76.7%
Sheffield South Yorkshire 1415 77.5%
Edinburgh Scotland 857 78.5%
Bristol South West 1387 79.6%
  1. 10 largest towns and cities by population

Alex Gosling, CEO of online estate agents HouseSimple.com comments: “With the need to build more homes in the UK, and space at a premium, we could well see fewer and fewer new build properties with private gardens. Even new build family homes rarely come with the expansive back gardens you might have seen 30 to 40 years ago.

“In heavily populated areas, developments are squeezed in and the reality is that private gardens takes up valuable square footage. Hence, we are likely to see more modern block of flats to meet housing demand, and the outside space will inevitably be sacrificed.

“However, the death knell hasn’t been sounded for the back garden. There are plenty of towns, such as Grimsby, Crawley and Southport, where the majority of properties have private outside space. And moving further away from major cities, you’re more likely to find houses not flats and the large back garden you’re craving.”

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