Invezz

UK house prices increase 0.2% in June as annual growth improves

UK house prices increase 0.2% in June as annual growth improves
Rivanshi Rakhrai
07 Jul 2026, 12:25 PM

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UK housebuilders (FTSE 250)

Buy: Persimmon (PSN) and Taylor Wimpey (TW). A first monthly uptick plus stabilizing annual growth (0.6%) signals demand is no longer falling off a cliff, which typically improves sales velocity and pricing power for volume builders. Pair with FTSE 250 exposure to capture UK-specific housing normalization while London remains weak.

Key Risk: Mortgage approvals keep sliding, forcing builders to cut prices and delay starts.

UK mortgage lenders (Lloyds/Halifax peers)

Buy: Lloyds Banking Group (LLOY). House prices stabilizing and slightly rising reduces credit losses and supports mortgage book performance; even with approvals down, the direction of price change is a near-term tailwind for collateral values and sentiment.

Key Risk: Interest-rate expectations flip back higher, pushing mortgage demand and arrears up fast.

  • UK house prices rose 0.2% in June after four consecutive monthly declines.
  • Annual house price growth reached 0.6%, with Northern Ireland leading regional gains.
  • Mortgage approvals fell in May, signalling softer housing market activity.

British house prices increased by 0.2% in June, marking the first monthly rise in four months, while annual growth accelerated slightly to 0.6%, according to data released by mortgage lender Lloyds on Tuesday.

The latest figures showed that the average UK property price reached £299,330 during the month.

The increase follows several months of weaker price performance and comes amid continued economic uncertainty.

First monthly increase in four months

According to the Lloyds House Price Index, house prices rose by 0.2% in June compared with May.

The annual rate of house price growth also edged higher to 0.6%.

Amanda Bryden, Head of Mortgages at Lloyds, said recent trends continued to reflect broader economic conditions.

"House prices rose for the first time in four months during June, increasing by 0.2%, compared to May. The typical property now costs £299,330, while the annual rate of growth also edged higher to 0.6%."

Bryden added that wider economic uncertainty continued to shape the housing market.

She also said,"Recent price trends continue to reflect wider economic uncertainty, including the impact of global events on inflation and interest rate expectations."

Regional performance remains mixed

The Lloyds House Price Index showed that Northern Ireland continued to record the strongest annual house price growth across the UK.

Average house prices in Northern Ireland increased by 7.4% over the past year to £229,000.

In Wales, annual house price growth strengthened to 0.9%, taking the average property value to £231,142.

Within England, stronger price growth remained concentrated in northern regions.

The North East recorded annual price growth of 2.8%, with the average property priced at £181,133.

The North West followed with an annual growth of 2.4%, lifting the average home price to £248,218.

However, southern regions continued to experience weaker price performance.

The South East recorded the sharpest annual decline, with house prices falling 2.0% year-on-year to £381,654.

London also remained under pressure, with average property values declining 1.1% from a year earlier to £534,831.

Mortgage approvals decline

Separate data from the Bank of England indicated that mortgage approvals for house purchases fell during May, suggesting housing market activity softened following earlier gains.

Mortgage approvals declined by 14.9% to 56,205 in May 2026.

On a year-on-year basis, approvals were 10.8% lower than in May 2025, seasonally adjusted.

The decline in approvals points to slower buyer activity despite mortgage rates easing from recent highs.

About the Lloyds house price index

The Lloyds House Price Index, formerly known as the Halifax House Price Index, is the UK's longest-running monthly house price series, with nationwide data dating back to January 1983.

The index calculates a standardised house price and analyses like-for-like property price movements over time, incorporating seasonal adjustments.

Annual price changes are measured by comparing the current month's seasonally adjusted figure with the corresponding month a year earlier.