Average House Price in Yorkshire and The Humber
As of December 2025, the average house price in Yorkshire and The Humber is £208,447. The average monthly rent is £843.
A single number doesn't tell you much about direction or pressure. Bread Index adds context by showing the same homes in pounds and in bread-adjusted terms.
How Yorkshire and The Humber has moved recently
Over the last 12 months, Yorkshire and The Humber has outpaced the wider England.
If you’re selling, it’s not just about prices going up. You’re looking for a stretch where they’ve climbed well, and maybe even picked up pace recently - the kind of run that makes buyers feel they need to act. Sometimes the sweet spot is after years of steady growth, just before things start to cool.
If you’re buying, you’re reading the same pattern differently. A recent dip after a strong few years can look like an opening - a solid area that’s taken a breather. Or you might be watching for signs the market has steadied after falling, hoping you’re close to the floor rather than the peak.
The longer view - has it really gone up?
Compared to 10 years ago, homes in Yorkshire and The Humber have genuinely risen in value - even after accounting for rising everyday costs.
Sometimes prices rise in pounds but stand still once you account for everyday costs. That gap changes how you think about "growth".
Key numbers at a glance
Is Yorkshire and The Humber leaning towards buyers or sellers?
Over the last 12 months: Prices have been rising strongly. Sellers currently hold more leverage and houses may be selling faster and go for more than asking price.
Recent growth is slower than Yorkshire and The Humber's long-term trend.
What's driving growth - and in which homes?
Semi-detached homes have grown fastest, around +2.3% more than the regional average over five years.
If you're buying, this hints at where demand is strongest. If you're selling, it shows where buyers are competing hardest.
5-year growth by property type
+2.3% versus Yorkshire and The Humber's 5-year average.
+2.0% versus Yorkshire and The Humber's 5-year average.
-3.3% versus Yorkshire and The Humber's 5-year average.
-8.4% versus Yorkshire and The Humber's 5-year average.
Buy or rent in Yorkshire and The Humber?
If you treat mortgage interest as the "rent" paid to the bank, you can compare owning and renting more directly.
Over the last 3 years, renting has been roughly £13 per month cheaper than buying.
With a 10% deposit example, you would be about £16,347 better off overall: £16,819 from price changes and £-472 from rent-versus-interest differences.
How Yorkshire and The Humber compares nationally
The average price in Yorkshire and The Humber (£208,447) is below the UK average of £270,259.
Average rent in Yorkshire and The Humber (£843) is below the UK average of £1,367.
Yorkshire and The Humber has grown noticeably faster than the UK average over 5 years.
The long term view
In everyday terms, homes in Yorkshire and The Humber are cheaper than they were 20 years ago.
Average annual growth: -0.6%, compared to -0.2% nationally.
For long-term buyers, this is about wealth building. For first-time buyers, it helps separate one cycle from the wider trend.
Comparison table
| Horizon | In pounds | bread-adjusted | UK (£) | UK (bread) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 year | +3.3% | +1.0% | +2.4% | +0.1% |
| 5 years | +23.5% | -10.3% | +18.3% | -14.1% |
| 10 years | +52.2% | +8.4% | +43.2% | +2.0% |
| 20 years | +69.8% | -11.1% | +83.1% | -4.1% |
Where next?
Methodology
- House prices: UK House Price Index via regional performance.
- Rents: ONS private-rent metrics via `rentalPriceAll` performance.
- Buy vs rent estimate: monthly mortgage interest proxy using 2-year fixed mortgage-rate series and 10% deposit.
FAQs
What is the average house price in Yorkshire and The Humber?
As of December 2025, the average is £208,447.
How does Yorkshire and The Humber compare with the UK?
Yorkshire and The Humber has grown noticeably faster than the UK average over 5 years.
Is buying currently cheaper than renting in Yorkshire and The Humber?
Over the last 3 years, renting has been roughly £13 per month cheaper than buying.
Neighbouring Markets