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What
does £1 Million purchase in Britain today?
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What
does £1 Million purchase in Britain today?
So just what does
£1m procure in today's market? Penny Churchill investigates.
According to a report by Savills Research
one in every 223 houses sold in England and Wales during the
first half of 2006 fetched £1 million or more; in 2001
the ratio was one residence in 559.
'The biggest winners in the current house-price
lottery are homeowners in London and the South-East ' comments
Yolande Barnes of Savills adding 'one in every 44 homes in
Greater London has a price-tag of more than £1m as does
every 169th house sold in the South-East'.
The latest Land Registry figures show that
the London borough of Kensington and Chelsea had the highest
proportion of million-pound homes in the first six months
of 2006 with more than one in every five dwellings and flats
in the borough selling for more than £1m.
Outside London the districts with the highest
numbers of sales over £1m were Elmbridge in Surrey Runnymede
in Berkshire South Buckinghamshire and Chiltern in Buckinghamshire.
The southern 'super-towns' of Guildford Sevenoaks Oxford St
Albans and Winchester also ranked high in the ratings with
one in 50 sales topping the million mark. To a lesser extent
villages south of Manchester and north of Newcastle also had
a high proportion of million-pound residence sales.
As recently as 10 years ago a buyer coming
out of London with £1m to spend on a dwelling in the
Home Counties would have been 'king of the castle top of the
heap'. In 2006 however £1m will just about secure him
a toehold on the second rung of the country-property ladder
bearing in mind that a property sold at that price is liable
to stamp duty and legal costs of about £50 000.
A budget of £1m begins to look even
more puny when seen in the light of the latest figures from
the Country Life Elite home Index which show that of 1 396
country dwellings advertised in the magazine in the first
six months of 2006 only 88 abodes 6.3% of the total offered
for sale were priced at £950 000 to £1m. In fact
about two-thirds of all dwellings advertised were priced at
more than £1m.
So what can you get for £1m in Britain
these days? The answer is very little or quite a lot depending
on where and what you choose to buy. In prime central London
Kensington & Chelsea Mayfair and Belgravia £1m will
purchase you a smart two-bedroom apartment with a share of
the freehold of a mansion block within walking distance of
Harrods. It is extremely rare to find a premises in central
London for £1m these days although in recent weeks Savills
sold a three-bedroom terraced house at 57 Walham Grove Fulham
SW6 for precisely that sum.
Millionaire buyers moving out of London
are also learning to scale down their expectations. As Serena
Brown of Surrey agents Browns explains: 'A few years ago £1m
would have bought the classic village rectory with a generous
parcel of land. However with increasing City bonuses and the
rise in popularity of West Sussex in particular things have
changed: the price of the classic rectory is now more likely
to be a seven-figure sum starting with a '2' and West Sussex
is no longer Surrey's poor relation. At the same time £1m
can still purchase a family's dream home although nowadays
this is more likely to be a four to five bedroom period cottage
with an acre or so of land or a four-bedroom detached town
abode near good schools and a mainline station.'
Browns quote a guide price of £975
000 for pretty Beetlehook Cottage at Kirdford West Sussex
an extended 16th-century cottage with three reception rooms
five bedrooms and three-quarters of an acre adjoining National
Trust land on the edge of the village.
Across the county border in Kent £995
000 is the price quoted by Cluttons Calcutt Maclean Standen
for Great Ivy Cottage at Broomfield on the edge of the Leeds
Castle estate: the immaculate five-bedroom farmhouse listed
Grade II has three acres of spectacular gardens a swimming
pool and a grass tennis court.
Some buyers are not prepared to compromise
on their ultimate dream and it is no coincidence that six
of 33 properties sold at £1m through Country Life in
the first half of 2006 should be period farmhouses or old
rectories in need of serious renovation. Currently on the
market is the 17th-century Tithe residence at Barnsley Gloucestershire
a charming former vicarage which 'would benefit from some
sympathetic modernisation' say selling agents Butler Sherborn
who invite 'offers in the region of £950 000'.
The rise and rise of dwelling values in
the West Country has been a feature of the country-house market
in recent years and the classic old rectory or manor residence
is now well beyond the reach of the average premises millionaire
in that part of the country. But it could be worse as £1m
still buys a classic Devon longhouse or Somerset farmhouse
with 4050 acres on Exmoor or Dartmoor such as picturesque
Oaktrow Farm at Timberscombe near Minehead Somerset which
is currently for sale through Savills at a guide price of
£1m.
In the Midlands East Anglia and the North
and North-East a £1m dwelling is still a badge of respectability
which its owner wears with pride. In Yorkshire for example
£1m may not acquire a classic Georgian country house
ring-fenced within its own acreage but it will buy an elegant
town premises in Harrogate or York or a Victorian manor house
such as Folkton Manor at Folkton North Yorkshire currently
for sale through Carter Jonas at £985 000.
A million pounds no longer buys a classic
country dwelling with 100 acres of land anywhere in Englandfor
that you have to cross the border into Scotland where Savills
are offering a taste of forgotten Highland grandeur at Shandwick
house Kildary Easter Ross. Set in 140 acres of parkland over-
looking Cromarty Firth the eight-bedroom mansion was built
by Lord Ankerville in 1936 using stone reclaimed from an earlier
main house. The agents invite 'offers in excess of £950
000.
This article first appeared in Country Life
magazine on September 7 2006
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advice when buying a prime UK country or London property contact
leading Property Search Agents, Sands Home Search.
Telephone: 01425 462549 (+44 1425 462549)
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