The street where homes cost £7m!

Find out which street is home to the most expensive properties in the UK.

Recently, Mouseprice.com has published its latest report on the most expensive streets in England & Wales, and some of the figures are positively eye-watering.

The domination of Kensington & Chelsea

It will likely come as no surprise that the 20 most expensive streets to live in England and Wales are all found within Greater London.

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However, it is a particular corner of London that dominates – the borough of Kensington and Chelsea, boasting a whopping 12 of the top 20 streets.

The prices involved are staggering. Topping the table, for the second year in a row, is Chester Square, where the average property is worth a frankly unbelievable £6,596,000. That represents a jump of a whopping £300,000 over the past year alone!

The last property sold on the street went for just shy of £7m, while 2008 saw four sales of between £12.2 million and £19.7 million.

Somewhat surprisingly, Chester Street didn’t even appear in the list before 2008!

The rest of the country

So how do the rest of the country compare? The table below details the average house price based on the top 10 streets in each region.

Region

Average of top 10 streets

Greater London

£5,545,900

South East

£3,368,060

East

£1,768,880

North West

£1,674,130

South West

£1,347,080

West Midlands

£1,058,040

Yorkshire & the Humber

£1,003,170

East Midlands

£856,050

North East

£820,200

Wales

£676,320

While the ranking order of the regions remains unchanged from last year, the performance of the regions has not been so consistent. Despite the nine straight months of house price growth reported by the various indices over most of 2009, three of the ten regions nonetheless reported house price falls.

The South West, West Midlands and Yorkshire & the Humber all saw falls in the average house price based on their most expensive streets, albeit by varying degrees – the shift in the South West was marginal.

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The one thing this study shows us is that, recession or not, if you want to buy a top-end property, in most areas of England & Wales you are going to have to hand over more than a million pounds.

House prices may have experienced a rocky couple of years, but they are still seriously expensive if you are buying in a flash postcode.

So just why are these streets so desirable?

With Chester Street, there is a history of famous residents, from the author Mary Shelley to Margaret Thatcher and the current Chelsea owner, Roman Abramovich, as well as its location in the City of Westminster making it attractive to the great and the good.

But what about those expensive streets across the rest of the nation?

Prettiest over priciest

Of course, for most of us such homes are little more than a pipedream. Thankfully though, buying somewhere pretty may work out substantially cheaper.

This week marks the conclusion of the first ever Google Street View Awards, with The Shambles in York taking the prize as the most picturesque street in Britain. Local property is available at an average of £186,086, according to Zoopla.

A home on second placed Royal Crescent in Bath will set you back £512,977, while third placed Grey Street in Newcastle will cost around £346,636.

Frankly, I’d always prefer to be surrounded by lovely views than the rich and famous!

Ed Bowsher chats to Sarah Beeny, presenter of Channel Four’s ‘Property Snakes and Ladders’ about the housing market, property developing, and her new online venture, Tepilo.

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