Rural rules the roost as countryside homes plough ahead of urban properties for house price growth

  • House prices in predominantly rural areas have risen by 23% over the last five years, compared to 18% in predominantly urban areas
  • Rural terraced properties have seen the strongest rate of price growth, urban flats the weakest

Commenting on the figures, Andrew Harvey, Nationwide's Senior Economist, said:

“Average house price growth in predominantly rural local authorities has continued to outpace that in predominantly urban areas. Between December 2019 and December 2024, house prices in predominantly rural areas increased by 23%, compared with 18% in predominantly urban areas. Local authorities classified as ‘urban with significant rural’ saw price growth of 22% over the same period.

Urban rural house prices May25

“We used the ONS’ broad rural urban classification, which identifies the proportion of the population living in different area types:

Type

ONS definition

Examples of authorities

predominantly rural

 More than half of population live in rural settlements or market towns

Cotswold

North Norfolk

Rutland

Shropshire

Urban with significant rural

26% to 49% of population live in either rural villages or market towns

Ashford

Bedford

Boston

Stroud

Predominantly urban

75%+ of population are either in towns or cities

Derby

Exeter

Norwich

“The pandemic had a significant impact on housing demand during 2021 and 2022, with our research at the time pointing to a shift in preferences towards more rural areas, particularly amongst older age groups. Whilst these effects have now faded, less urban areas have continued to hold the edge in terms of house price growth.

“In our latest housing market survey1, we focused on homeowners who have moved in the last five years. Our findings indicate that the majority (63%) of house moves were within the same type of area, with the biggest flow being within large towns or cities. Around 9% of moves were from towns / cities to rural areas (villages or hamlets)2, although this was partially offset by 7% who moved from rural to more urban areas(3).

Urban rural area flows May25

“However, amongst those who moved to a different type of area, there was a significant difference by age group, with younger people (those aged 25-34) tending to move to more urban areas, whilst older age groups, particularly 55+, favouring more rural areas.

Urban rural moving by age May25

Rural semi-detached properties have seen strongest price growth over last five years

“Our survey data shows that a bigger property or garden was the top reason cited by those moving in the last five years, which may in part reflect the ‘race for space’ seen during the pandemic.

Urban rural top reasons for moving May25

“Indeed, a third of survey respondents (33%) purchased a detached property, with just 15% buying a flat. Looking at the flows between property types, it appears the majority of home movers ‘traded up’ (see chart below).

Urban rural prop flows May25

“Amongst those buying in rural locations, 41% of those surveyed bought a detached house, with a further 29% buying a semi-detached. But it is actually rural terraced properties that have seen the strongest price growth between December 2019 and December 2024, with average prices increasing by 25%. (Note that due to data availability, these figures exclude Scottish local authorities).

Urban rural prop type May25

“Rural semi-detached also increased by 25% over the same period, with urban semis seeing a 24% rise. Meanwhile, rural detached properties increased by 21%. Flats saw considerably weaker price growth, particularly those in predominantly urban areas, which increased by just 6% over the last five years.

Local authority house price performance

“Despite rural areas performing better overall, only four out of the 20 top performing local authorities in 2024 were classed as predominantly rural. Tewkesbury in Gloucestershire, which is just north of the Cotswolds, was the top performing rural authority in 2024, with average prices rising by 11%.

Top performing local authorities (2024)

Local Authority

GOR

Type

Average price

% chg

Blackburn with Darwen

N West

Urban

158,790

13%

Inverclyde

Scotland

Urban

112,517

11%

Tewkesbury

S West

Rural

334,361

11%

Harborough

E Mids

Rural

356,463

11%

Stirling

Scotland

Urban

237,088

10%

Bassetlaw

E Mids

Rural

211,266

10%

Lichfield

W Mids

Urban sig. rural

333,858

10%

Sefton

N West

Urban

220,341

10%

North East Derbyshire

E Mids

Urban

250,644

10%

Liverpool

N West

Urban

176,211

10%

Renfrewshire

Scotland

Urban

156,452

10%

South Staffordshire

W Mids

Urban sig. rural

306,405

10%

South Oxfordshire

S East

Rural

484,364

9%

Blaenau Gwent

Wales

Urban

140,057

9%

North Lanarkshire

Scotland

Urban

149,170

9%

Cherwell

S East

Urban sig. rural

362,035

9%

East Ayrshire

Scotland

Urban

129,763

9%

Rhondda Cynon Taf

Wales

Urban

157,903

9%

Greenwich

London

Urban

485,772

9%

North East Lincolnshire

Yorks

Urban

152,249

9%

Note: See map attached highlighting above locations

“Of the 349 local authorities in Great Britain, 212 (61%) are classified as predominantly urban, 89 (26%) as predominantly rural, while the remaining 48 (14%) are classed as urban with significant rural. The South West has the highest proportion of rural local authorities, with over 50% being predominantly rural (14 out of 26), while London unsurprisingly has none.

“The tables on the following page show the top performing local authorities in each region in terms of annual house price growth in 2024 split by rural and urban.”

Top performing rural local authorities (2024)

GOR

Local authority

Average price

% chg

S West

Tewkesbury

334,361

11%

East Mids

Harborough

356,463

11%

S East

South Oxfordshire

484,364

9%

Scotland

Shetland Islands

191,083

8%

East

East Cambridgeshire

345,041

8%

N East

County Durham

135,405

8%

W Mids

Stratford-on-Avon

387,411

7%

Wales

Carmarthenshire

197,925

6%

N West

Westmorland & Furness

236,511

6%

Yorks

North Yorkshire

276,027

5%

Note: No rural local authorities in London

Top performing urban local authorities (2024)

GOR

Local authority

Average price

% chg

N West

Blackburn with Darwen

158,790

13%

Scotland

Inverclyde

112,517

11%

E Mids

North East Derbyshire

250,644

10%

Wales

Blaenau Gwent

140,057

9%

London

Greenwich

485,772

9%

Yorks

North East Lincolnshire

152,249

9%

East

St Albans

651,451

8%

N East

North Tyneside

198,764

8%

W Mids

Coventry

227,509

7%

S East

Southampton

244,863

7%

S West

South Gloucestershire

339,008

5%

Full report also attached

-ends-

Notes to editors

  1. The research was conducted by Censuswide, among a sample of 2,000 respondents who have moved within the past 5 years and own a home with a mortgage or own outright (18+). The data was collected between 30.04.2025 - 06.05.2025. Censuswide abides by and employs members of the Market Research Society and follows the MRS code of conduct and ESOMAR principles. Censuswide is also a member of the British Polling Council.
  1. Combination of those moving from large town / city to rural & from small town to rural. See table below for full details.
  1. Combination of those moving from rural to large town city & from rural to small town. See table below for full details.

Homeowners who moved in last 5 years

Moved from

Moved to

Large town / city

Small town

Rural

Large town / city

42%

9%

5%

Small town

11%

14%

4%

Rural

4%

4%

7%

Notes:

House price data is sourced from the UK House Price Index (UK HPI) dataset. Data covers the period December 2019 to December 2024. The UK HPI is a joint production by HM Land Registry, Land and Property Services Northern Ireland, Office for National Statistics and Registers of Scotland. Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right 2025. This data is licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0.

Rural/urban classification uses RUC2011 from the Office for National Statistics (for England & Wales) and Scottish Government Urban Rural Classification (2016).

To derive average house price for each broad classification group (i.e. predominantly urban, urban with significant rural and predominantly rural), we calculated a weighted average of the local authorities within each group. Weights used based on the stock of dwellings in each local authority. For property type (i.e. detached, semi-detached, terraced & flats), we weighted by the stock of the relevant type within each local authority.

Dwellings stock data sourced from Valuation Office Agency (for England & Wales) and Scottish Government.