UK Sold House Prices
Look up every recorded Land Registry sale price for any UK address. Free instant summary, full property report for £29.
What you'll see for any UK address
Every report opens with the sale history for the property itself, then sets that history in context.
Every recorded sale
Each Land Registry transaction for the property since 1995, with date, price, property type and freehold or leasehold status.
Comparable nearby sales
Recent sale prices for similar homes within walking distance, so you can pressure-test the asking price against what real buyers actually paid.
Local market trend
How prices for the property's type are moving across the local area, so a single sale isn't your only data point.
Where the data comes from
Sale prices come from HM Land Registry Price Paid Data, refreshed monthly. Our copy of the dataset covers transactions from 1995 to February 2026, with around 30.8 million sales recorded across England and Wales (HM Land Registry).
The most recent two to three months of sales typically aren't in the dataset yet. Land Registry batches transfers as conveyancers submit them, so a sale that completed in March may not appear until June. Where you see a recent gap in a property's sale history, that's usually why.
What sold prices don't tell you
The Price Paid dataset is the best public record of what UK property changed hands for, but it has real gaps. Knowing them is most of the work.
- Leasehold flag is shown, lease length isn't. Land Registry records whether the sale was freehold or leasehold, but the actual term remaining (and the ground rent) sits on the title document, not in the Price Paid feed.
- Off-market sales never appear. Anything that swapped hands without a registered Land Registry transfer (some private deals, certain inheritances, transfers between related parties) is invisible.
- New-build prices may include developer incentives. Stamp duty paid, white goods thrown in, deposit contributions. The headline price is the headline price. Around 1.9% of sales in the most recent twelve months were new builds (HM Land Registry), and they tend to set the top of any local distribution.
- The price is the price paid, not the value of any chattels. Curtains, carpets, kitchen appliances and garden equipment sometimes get priced separately at completion. Two identical houses can sell at the same headline figure with very different contents staying behind.
What the data shows nationally right now
In the most recent fully-reported year (Feb 2024 to Feb 2025), around 901,000 UK homes changed hands (HM Land Registry). Here's how the most recent twelve months break down by property type.
| Property type | Median price | Sales (12m) | YoY median |
|---|---|---|---|
| Detached | £415,000 | 107,566 | +1.2% |
| Semi-detached | £270,000 | 134,411 | +1.9% |
| Terraced | £227,500 | 141,072 | +3.4% |
| Flat or maisonette | £223,000 | 76,846 | -5.1% |
"Other" property types (10,383 sales, median £315,000) are excluded from the table because the category bundles unusual structures (parking spaces, agricultural land, mixed-use buildings) and the median is hard to interpret. Source: HM Land Registry, refreshed 1 May 2026.
How buyers use sold prices when making an offer
Anchor on actual recent neighbour sales, not the asking price
The asking price is what the seller hopes for. The sold price is what someone actually agreed to. Two doors down for £290,000 last year is far better evidence than a £325,000 listing on a portal, because no money changed hands at the listing price. Local planning activity can shift recent sales too. A refused application down the road may explain why the last sale undershot.
Watch the gap between sales on the same address
A property sold in 2024 and again in 2026 means something changed. It could be a job move or a divorce, but it could also signal hidden problems with the home, neighbours, or area. Long ownership (one sale every fifteen or twenty years) tends to be a positive sign.
Compare price-per-square-metre against true comparables
A flat at £4,000 per square metre and a detached house at £3,500 per square metre is not an arbitrage opportunity. They are two different markets with different buyer pools. Compare like with like, ideally within the same postcode and the same property type, before you trust a per-metre number.
Most properties have more sale history than you'd expect
Across the properties checked on Move Insights, 90.6% had at least one prior recorded Land Registry sale, with an average of 1.42 prior sales per property.
Older properties carry more sale history, and that history is one of the most useful inputs to a sensible offer. A house that turns over every twenty years tells you one thing; a flat sold three times in five years tells you something quite different.
Common questions
Know before you offer
Search any UK address — get a free summary instantly, or unlock the full 9-section report for £29.
Free summary · No credit card · Or instant PDF for £29 · Official UK sources