Demand for homes still outstripping supply

Demand for homes still outstripping supply

Another day, another house price index record.

The latest, from the Halifax, shows that typical house prices increased by over £24,500 in 2021, the largest annual boost since March 2003.
Wales remains the strongest performing location with annual rises of 14.5 per cent, and Northern Ireland on 10.6 per cent. Scotland was up 9.7 per cent. To continue reading, please Click Here


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Thinking of selling your Attleborough home? It’s tempting to set a high asking price—after all, it’s your biggest tax-free asset. But overpricing often backfires. Since 2020, more than 1,400 Attleborough homes were withdrawn unsold—many simply priced too high from the start.

In early 2023, headlines warned of a looming UK house price crash—but the reality has played out quite differently. Rather than collapse, the market has shown resilience, with modest shifts and growing stability, particularly in towns like Attleborough. As we move through 2025, fears of a crash appear increasingly unfounded.

How many people live in the average Attleborough home? It’s more than just a number—it reflects how families live today. With 20.3% of East Anglia households hosting four or more people, the need for spacious, flexible homes is clear—and it's shaping local housing demand in real, meaningful ways.

In Attleborough, parking is more than a convenience—it’s essential. With most households owning cars, access to parking shapes how we live and choose homes. For many buyers and tenants, it’s a must-have, not a bonus. Whether it's a driveway or nearby space, parking can make or break a property decision. Would it matter to you?