National statistics

UK House Price Index Scotland: April 2020

Published 19 August 2020

Applies to Scotland

1. Headline statistics for April 2020

The average price of a property in Scotland was £153,281

The annual price change of a property in Scotland was 1.6%

The monthly price change of a property in Scotland was 0.4%

The index figure for Scotland (January 2015 = 100) was 113.6

Estimates for the most recent months are provisional and are likely to be updated as more data is incorporated into the index. Read the revision policies.

Next publication of UK HPI

The May 2020 UK HPI will be published at 9.30am on Wednesday 2 September 2020. See the provisional publication schedule for more information.

2. Economic statement

The UK HPI is based on completed housing transactions. Typically, a house purchase can take 6 to 8 weeks to reach completion. Therefore, the price data feeding into the April 2020 UK HPI will reflect those agreements that occurred before the government measures to reduce the spread of coronavirus took hold.

Scotland house prices increased by 1.6% in the year to April 2020, down from 2.1% in the year to March 2020. Scotland house prices were growing slower than the UK annual rate of 2.6% in the year to April 2020. On a non-seasonally adjusted basis average house prices in Scotland increased by 0.4% between March 2020 and April 2020, compared with an increase of 0.8% during the same period a year earlier (March 2019 and April 2019). On a seasonally adjusted basis, average house prices in Scotland have decreased by 0.5% between March 2020 and April 2020.

Comparing the provisional volume estimate for February 2019 with the provisional estimate for February 2020, volume transactions increased by 6.5% in Scotland.

In Scotland, detached houses showed the biggest increase out of all property types, rising by 4.1% in the year to April 2020 to £269,000. The smallest average house price growth of all property types was in flats, down by 0.8% in the year to April 2020 to £108,000.

House prices increased over the last year in 21 out of 32 local authority areas. The largest growth was in Dumfries and Galloway where prices increased by 10.2% in the year to April 2020 to £137,000. The biggest fall for year ending April 2020, was recorded in City of Aberdeen where average prices fell over the year by 8.1% to £140,000.

As with other indicators in the housing market, which typically fluctuate from month to month, it is important not to put too much weight on one month’s set of house price data.

3. Price change

3.1 Annual price change

Annual price change for Scotland over the past 5 years

A chart showing the annual price change for Scotland over the past 5 years.

In Scotland, average prices increased by 1.6% in the year to April 2020 (down from 2.1% in the year to March 2020).

Annual price change by local authority for Scotland

Low numbers of sales transactions in some local authorities, such as Orkney Islands, Na h-Eileanan Siar and Shetland Islands, can lead to volatility in the series.

While we make efforts to account for this volatility, the change in price in these local levels can be influenced by the type and number of properties sold in any given period.

Geographies with low number of sales transactions should be analysed in the context of their longer-term trends rather than focusing on monthly movements.

Local authorities April 2020 April 2019 Difference
Aberdeenshire £169,694 £181,497 -6.5%
Angus £144,117 £143,585 0.4%
Argyll and Bute £141,235 £141,158 0.1%
City of Aberdeen £139,796 £152,065 -8.1%
City of Dundee £121,449 £119,352 1.8%
City of Edinburgh £281,266 £261,588 7.5%
City of Glasgow £132,784 £131,527 1.0%
Clackmannanshire £123,776 £128,782 -3.9%
Dumfries and Galloway £136,703 £124,030 10.2%
East Ayrshire £99,840 £92,381 8.1%
East Dunbartonshire £206,288 £207,555 -0.6%
East Lothian £231,219 £228,697 1.1%
East Renfrewshire £218,434 £227,475 -4.0%
Falkirk £128,237 £120,818 6.1%
Fife £134,707 £129,416 4.1%
Highland £173,047 £167,234 3.5%
Inverclyde £93,232 £101,162 -7.8%
Midlothian £191,700 £188,309 1.8%
Moray £158,727 £150,898 5.2%
Na h-Eileanan Siar £110,599 £112,562 -1.7%
North Ayrshire £103,561 £107,757 -3.9%
North Lanarkshire £108,675 £106,793 1.8%
Orkney Islands £122,612 £145,887 -16.0%
Perth and Kinross £194,214 £190,138 2.1%
Renfrewshire £122,808 £119,358 2.9%
Scottish Borders £160,813 £149,003 7.9%
Shetland Islands £152,942 £167,145 -8.5%
South Ayrshire £127,486 £129,223 -1.3%
South Lanarkshire £133,738 £125,344 6.7%
Stirling £196,096 £187,599 4.5%
West Dunbartonshire £110,853 £100,941 9.8%
West Lothian £161,253 £159,653 1.0%
Scotland £153,281 £150,794 1.6%

Average price by local authority for Scotland

The heat map is unavailable due to the impact of the ongoing coronavirus pandemic on operational services.

In April 2020, the most expensive area to purchase a property was City of Edinburgh, where the average cost was £281,000. In contrast, the cheapest area to purchase a property was Inverclyde, where the average cost was £93,000.

3.2 Average price change by property type

Average price change by property type for Scotland

Property type April 2020 April 2019 Difference
Detached £268,676 £257,981 4.1%
Semi-detached £159,526 £157,868 1.0%
Terraced £130,291 £125,986 3.4%
Flat or maisonette £107,868 £108,687 -0.8%
All £153,281 £150,794 1.6%

4. Sales volumes

The amount of time between the sale of a property and the registration of this information varies. It typically ranges between 2 weeks and 2 months but can be longer. Volume figures for the most recent 2 months are not yet at a reliable level for reporting, so they are not included in the report. Published transactions for recent months will increase as later registered transactions are incorporated into the index.

Sales volume data is also available by property status (new build and existing property) and funding status (cash and mortgage) in our downloadable data tables. Transactions involving the creation of a new register, such as new builds, are more complex and require more time to process. Read Revisions to the UK HPI data for more information.

4.1 Sales volumes by local authority

Sales volumes for Scotland by local authority

Local authorities February 2020 February 2019
Aberdeenshire 203 211
Angus 116 118
Argyll and Bute 92 99
City of Aberdeen 229 234
City of Dundee 118 117
City of Edinburgh 575 579
City of Glasgow 693 640
Clackmannanshire 52 46
Dumfries and Galloway 129 136
East Ayrshire 127 113
East Dunbartonshire 119 90
East Lothian 116 110
East Renfrewshire 121 81
Falkirk 164 152
Fife 356 342
Highland 276 257
Inverclyde 100 68
Midlothian 109 94
Moray 95 110
Na h-Eileanan Siar 23 27
North Ayrshire 180 133
North Lanarkshire 323 351
Orkney Islands 22 27
Perth and Kinross 186 175
Renfrewshire 213 187
Scottish Borders 118 109
Shetland Islands 18 21
South Ayrshire 115 124
South Lanarkshire 391 394
Stirling 81 89
West Dunbartonshire 83 79
West Lothian 193 180
Scotland 5,736 5,493

Note: The total sales volumes in Scotland are correct in the above table. However, in the downloadable datasets and the UK House Price Index tool a processing error has occurred when calculating the total sales volumes for February 2019 in Scotland. This will be corrected in the next publication. The sales volumes for the local authorities are unaffected.

Note: The estimate for February 2020 is calculated based on around 98% of the final registered transactions in Scotland. The number of property transactions for February 2020 will increase as more transactions are incorporated into the index. See our Revisions Policy for more information.

Comparing the provisional volume estimate for February 2019 with the provisional estimate for February 2020, volume transactions increased by 6.5% in Scotland.

UK Property Transaction Statistics published by HM Revenue & Customs (which differ in coverage but are more complete for this period) report that on a non-seasonally adjusted basis, volume transactions increased by 7.6% in Scotland in the year to February 2020.

4.2 Sales volumes

Sales volumes for Scotland over the past 5 years

Date Sales volumes for Scotland
February 2016 5,507
February 2017 5,816
February 2018 5,406
February 2019 4,502
February 2020 5,736

5. Property status

Transactions involving the creation of a new register, such as new builds, are more complex and need more time to process. This means they can take longer to appear in the land registers. The volume of new build transactions for the most recent 2 months are not at a reliable level for reporting the breakdown between new build and existing resold property, so they are not included in the report.

New build and existing resold property for Scotland

Property status Average price February 2020 Monthly change Annual change
New build £217,692 -3.4% 4.3%
Existing resold property £147,807 -2.1% 2.7%

Note: Since the October 2017 release, amendments have been made to our estimation model when calculating our provisional estimate. Find out further information and the impact of this change in methods used to produce the UK HPI.

6. Buyer status

First time buyer and former owner occupier for Scotland

Type of buyer Average price April 2020 Monthly change Annual change
First time buyer £123,598 0.2% 0.9%
Former owner occupier £184,291 0.5% 2.5%

7. Funding status

Cash and mortgage indicator for Scotland

Funding status Average price April 2020 Monthly change Annual change
Cash £141,042 0.8% 1.5%
Mortgage £158,974 0.1% 1.7%

8. Access the data

Download the data as CSV files or access it with our UK HPI tool.

Data revisions

View any revisions to previously published data in the data downloads or find out more about revisions in our guidance About the UK HPI.

9. About the UK House Price Index

The UK House Price Index (UK HPI) is calculated by the Office for National Statistics and Land & Property Services Northern Ireland. Find out about the methodology used to create the UK HPI.

Data for the UK House Price Index is provided by HM Land Registry, Registers of Scotland, The Land & Property Services/Northern Ireland Statistics & Research Agency and the Valuation Office Agency.

Find out more about the UK House Price Index.

10. Contact for Scotland queries

Anne MacDonald, Land & Property Data Team, Registers of Scotland

Email Anne.MacDonald@ros.gov.uk

Telephone 0131 378 4991