The following table shows the average house price in the fourth quarter, 2021. They are followed by an annual cash increase and percentage terms.

– Wales, £196,759, £26,913, 15.8 per cent

– Northern Ireland, £167,479, £18,096, 12.1 per cent

– South West, £294,845, £30,333, 11.5 per cent

– Outer South East (includes Ashford, Basingstoke and Deane, Bedford, Braintree, Brighton and Hove, Canterbury, Colchester, Dover, Hastings, Lewes, Fareham, Isle of Wight, Maldon, Milton Keynes, New Forest, Oxford, Portsmouth, Southampton, Swale, Tendring, Thanet, Uttlesford, Winchester, Worthing), £329,869, £33,579, 11.3 per cent

– North West, £196,806, £19,882, 11.2 per cent

– Yorkshire and the Humber, £190,855, £18,530, 10.8 per cent

– East Anglia, £268,146, £25,342, 10.4 per cent

– East Midlands, £221,813, £20,861, 10.4 per cent

– Scotland, £172,605, £15,836, 10.1 per cent

– West Midlands, £227,031, £19,428, 9.4 per cent

– Outer Metropolitan (includes St Albans, Stevenage, Watford, Luton, Maidstone, Reading, Rochford, Rushmoor, Sevenoaks, Slough, Southend-on-Sea, Elmbridge, Epsom and Ewell, Guildford, Mole Valley, Reigate & Banstead, Runnymede, Spelthorne, Waverley, Woking, Tunbridge Wells, Windsor and Maidenhead, Wokingham), £410,992, £33,316, 8.8 per cent

– North East, £148,105, £10,574, 7.7 per cent

– London, £507,230, £20,668, 4.2 per cent