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You searched for listings within All. There are currently 500+ price drops in this location. Recently updated listings are highlighted in pink. Click here to sort by last updated date.

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  address type original price current price change days on market postcode
Kew Bridge Court W4 3AE 3 bedroom £50,000,000 £49,999,992 DOWN 0% 41 days (w4)
Prime Residential Development Oppor NW8 6JD 8 bedroom £18,000,000 £12,000,000 DOWN 33% 679 days (nw8)
Winnington Road 0 bedroom £17,500,000 £13,750,000 DOWN 21% 52 days (n2)
Ashburton House is discreetly locat SW7 1BX 7 bedroom terraced £15,000,000 £13,000,000 DOWN 13% 169 days (sw7)
property for sale in leeds LS7 3HR 4 bedroom terraced £13,500,000 £10,000,000 DOWN 25% 1206 days (ls7)
River Lodge is a recently built res SW1V 3JY 10 bedroom £13,000,000 £12,000,000 DOWN 7% 556 days (sw1v)
Undoubtedly, one the most spectacul W2 2ET 5 bedroom £12,000,000 £8,950,000 DOWN 25% 154 days (w2)
A recently completed high specifica W10 5BZ 10 bedroom £12,000,000 £11,500,000 DOWN 4% 504 days (w10)
Lees Place W1K 6LL 0 bedroom £11,999,999 £11,999,990 DOWN 0% 39 days (w1k)
Kensal Road W10 3 bedroom £11,500,000 £11,499,990 DOWN 0% 41 days (w10)

Listings provided by Oodle.

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Comments

  • Bearback || Hi guys and gals. The HousePriceCrash party has just begun, we are gonna have some fun watching this crash unfold. A big shout out to all the guys at Housepricecrash.co.uk. -- left at Sun May 27 20:46:36 +0000 2007
  • RealistBear || The posions in the mud are beggining to hatch out -- left at Thu May 31 13:05:08 +0000 2007
  • Felix || You both sound a bit too gleeful. I take it you have not been able to get on the ladder. The house price crash has not begun. Many of the reductions on these properties are overvalued in the first place and so what you see here is a correction not a crash. Big difference. -- left at Wed Jun 13 08:54:29 +0000 2007
  • Bearback || A correction is when the people get shafted. A crash is when the banks get shated too. Hahaha, bring on the crash!!!!!!!!! -- left at Sun Jun 17 14:59:06 +0000 2007
  • demoralised native || even with the reduction they are still too over priced bring on the crash. crash crash crash!. on a more polite note brillant website (very good kept secret)you must be an estate agents worst nightmare keep up the good work. you have managed to convince that there are some properties in england still, that are below 200k -- left at Sat Nov 24 15:29:58 +0000 2007
  • peter || If you guys look back at house price records you will clearly see that since records began there are only about 3 years in which house prices didnt go up! if you are foolish enough to believe that what we are experiencing right now then keep laughing as i know for sure who will end up right, lets agree to disagree you keep laughing and i will keep buying. I have already made millions from property a lot of which is sold and in the bank, have you missed the boat? I bet you always thought there might be a crash never mind boys dont be bitter! -- left at Thu Jan 10 13:16:01 +0000 2008
  • ERIK THE VIKING || Unfortunately there a people who get really hacked off seeing other people make money. "Why should I get of my backside to make money?" "Hey Stop making money, can't you just lose money for god's sake ... you're making me look stupid, I don't want to get of my butt and do stuff" Unfortunately dumb boys... CRASH = MORE MONEY FOR THE EDUCATED DOERS I do not choose to be a common man, it is my right to be uncommon if I can. I seek opportunity, not security. I do not wish to be a kept citizen, humbled and dulled by having the state look after me. I want to take the calculated risk, to dream and to build, to fail and to succeed. I refuse to barter incentive for a dole. I prefer the challenges of life to a guaranteed existence, the thrill of fulfillment to the stale calm of Utopia. I will not trade freedom for beneficence, nor dignity for a handout. It is my heritage to think and to act for myself, to enjoy the benefits of my creations, and to face the world boldly and say: This I have done. -- left at Wed Jan 23 14:36:46 +0000 2008
  • Laura || Quote "I will not trade freedom for beneficence, nor dignity for a handout" ... but you don't mind profiting from a basic need & doing bugger all to 'achieve' it. Your karma kiddo. -- left at Tue Feb 12 16:00:34 +0000 2008
  • Don't look back in anger || I've made money out of property - my present property is worth 10 times what I paid for it - and have sold all others as I believe crash is inevitable. When I pulled out over a year ago(a bit hasty but I'm a single mum not an expert!)my friends laughed and many more comments were made behind my back. They are a lot quieter now! -- left at Sat Feb 16 21:18:38 +0000 2008
  • Matt || Expect a lot more traffic to this site over the next few months. There are a substantial number of banks who have not yet posted their annual figures yet. The IMF is concerned about the worldwide economy. If you haven't already sold,I would be seriously considering how to afford any repayments you may have to make over the next 5 years or so. This will get very ugly indeed. -- left at Sun Apr 13 10:08:30 +0000 2008
  • || Absolutely brilliant site! -- left at Mon Apr 14 18:45:40 +0000 2008
  • Sydney || There seems to be tricks being used to bamboozle this site, becoming alot less accurate..it's a shame. Agents are doing their best to keep prices up, only now are the wheels coming off -- left at Mon Apr 28 13:39:38 +0000 2008
  • z.khan || Fantastic Site -- left at Mon Apr 28 16:57:07 +0000 2008
  • Nat || Great website. Correction is inevitable for overpriced properties. -- left at Mon May 26 08:42:36 +0000 2008
  • odbob || thankfully house prices are beginning to correct, as was suggested this morning on telly ( 2nd Oct), house prices have fallen by 12.4% over the last 11 months, but are apparantly still some 60% higher, in reel terms than they should be, thanks to the irresponsible lending culture. -- left at Thu Oct 02 12:35:38 +0000 2008
  • Dave Page || Indeed Laura -- Eric is a fool (and a parasitic one at that). People like him are doing the rest of us out of one of the basic requirements of life in this country -- a roof over our heads (our own roof, that is). Think about it this way: how would it be if I had a preferential arrangement with the exchequer to buy up all the bread or milk and then sell it back to you at my price (while carping about what an enormous favour I'm doing you and what a disagreeable recepient of my services you are)? You would soon squak about that, would you not? I have been working and saving for a house for years and watched a home grow further out of my reach every year. Why should I be priced-out of a home because of the preferential tax treatment our government give to property speculators like you? Why oh why does the MIRAS tax break still exist for these people? This more than anything has inflated our housing market while robbing the exchequer. The UK government is acting in concert with the banking industry and the private investor to maintain stratospheric house prices; to insulate them (with taxpayer's money) against every falling to normalcy. An entire generation of people are being permanently priced out of home ownership -- kept paying the mortgages of others in privately-rented accommodation -- a new breed of have's and have not's. That this collosal inequity was ever allowed to happen is a disgrace; that it still persists is an outrage, and down to Gordon Brown alone. Remove the tax breaks for the BTL leech feeding off the body of the British housing supply: a painless (politically, as well as morally) way to restore some balance to the UK housing market... This is the mind-set of the BTL investor who profits from the labour of those unable to attain the first rung of the housing ladder -- the tenant pays the mortgage capital while the taxpayer pays the mortgage interest (because it's a 'business expense'). We heard nothing from these people when prices were shooting up and profits were going into pockets, but now the music is stopping they are horrified and start writng to newspapers because they might have to contribute financially to the house they own. Welcome to the world you have made. Watch the economy fly when a house can be bought for £50,000 again -- you will never see so much spending (of real money). Get interest rates up and people will only borrow what they can afford; thankfully, it looks like the banks will force this issue through self-interest, by only lending to secure borrowers / those with deposits. Bailing-out the banks with billions of pounds of taxpayer money puts the cost (or burden) of private home ownership on the public purse. We heard no noise from these people when prices were going up and profits into pockets and re-mortgages, yet now the music is stopping everyone else has to cover their mistakes -- the privatisation of profit and the socialisation of loss. Astonishingly, it is only because so many people bought homes they couldn't afford with money they didn't have that the taxpayer is expected to respond. The credit crunch has been the best thing for those of us in the UK who would like to buy a home but don't have the means to jump to 10 x earnings (or own houses already). It also reduces the capital available to the BTL parasites sweeping up all the property with the tax-concessionary blessing of our foul Government Why is inflation good when it's house prices but bad when it's anything else? Why is it bad news when house prices fall to a reasonable multiple of average income -- where ordinary working people can again afford to put their own roof over their heads? It is because of speculators like him, aided by the tax-concessionary blessing of our foul government, that I cannot afford to buy a home in London 20% fall? Given the 300% rise in the last decade, 75% is more in order... However, if all these shortsighted people whose short-term mortgage interest rates are about to increase must somehow be saved from their own incompetence, why don't the lenders simply increase the length of their term -- an increase in the length of the mortgage proportional to the percentage reset? This wouldn't cost the taxpayer or the mortgage provider anything and would keep these people in their homes -- which seems to be the main consideration; it would of course cost the homeowner more in the long term, but when you contract to buy a house for n hundred thousand pounds, you should expect to have to repay that sum Make this system 'dynamic', i.e., make the length of term flexible so that the length (rather than the monthly repayment) fluctuates with changing interest rates and no-one should lose out -- and those of use who were unable to buy houses won't have to pay for the folly of those who thought they were. -- left at Fri Jan 30 04:44:29 +0000 2009

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