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You searched for listings within kt1. There are currently 164 price drops in this postcode. Recently updated listings are highlighted in pink. Click here to sort by last updated date.

View other nearby postcodes: kt2 kt5 kt6 kt3 tw11 kt7 tw10 kt8 kt9 sw20

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  address type original price current price change days on market postcode
cambridge road KT1 2 bedroom end terrace £235,000 £234,950 DOWN 0% 51 days (kt1)
The Bittoms, KT1, Surrey 0 bedroom £299,950 £299,000 DOWN 0% 137 days (kt1)
The Bittoms,Surrey, XSituated only KT1 0 bedroom £299,950 £299,000 DOWN 0% 141 days (kt1)
surbiton crescent KT1 2 bedroom £187,500 £186,750 DOWN 0% 150 days (kt1)
Livesey Close, KT1, Surrey KT1 3GD 2 bedroom house £243,500 £239,950 DOWN 1% 80 days (kt1)
fairfax house KT1 2 bedroom £243,500 £239,950 DOWN 1% 83 days (kt1)
Livesey Close, Kingston, KT1 2 bedroom house £243,500 £239,950 DOWN 1% 59 days (kt1)
Beaufort Road, Kingston, KT1 2TT. 2 bedroom house £269,950 £264,950 DOWN 1% 293 days (kt1)
Anglesea Road Kingston-Upon-Thames KT1 2EN 2 bedroom flat £254,950 £249,950 DOWN 1% 254 days (kt1)
Mill Street, Kingston, Surrey 2 bedroom house £349,950 £343,000 DOWN 1% 344 days (kt1)

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View other nearby postcodes: kt2 kt5 kt6 kt3 tw11 kt7 tw10 kt8 kt9 sw20



Comments

  • Patricia || Still overpriced. -- left at Sat Jan 05 15:41:00 +0000 2008
  • James || When prices come down about 30% then buyers might return. -- left at Sun Jan 13 11:45:19 +0000 2008
  • James || I'm waiting till prices drop 30 percent...then it might be about right. -- left at Tue Jan 15 20:41:20 +0000 2008
  • S Taylor || Property Snake...you are not picking up all the reductions. I'm watching a flat reduced from 438k (Nov 07) and now priced at 399k (Feb 08) S Taylor. -- left at Mon Feb 18 08:40:14 +0000 2008
  • Louise Sanderson || Kingston prices are falling..whoopeee. Has the long anticipated House Price Crash finally started? -- left at Tue Apr 08 13:21:07 +0000 2008
  • Andew, Richmond || To Louise...yes the house price crash has started. We (first time buyers) must be patient and would be wasting money to contemplate buying in 2008 as property decreases in value month on month. I reckon property will be 40 per cent cheaper at the end of 2008 - and that's just the start. -- left at Fri Apr 25 10:17:43 +0000 2008
  • Jon || You'll be lucky - buy now with 10% off asking price - too many people want to live in kingston and too many good schools to go down more in price -- left at Tue May 06 16:15:55 +0000 2008
  • || Jon, you've seen nothing...Prices are dropping by £100 a Day and that will accelerate by Septembre to £500, Government already broke, trying to bail failing Banks, and that why everything is going up in prices ( food, Oil, ...etc ) inflation is the cause of Printing of Money out of thin air ( £50 Billion so far) and beleive me people will be crying over help...but there is always a Rent ...no one should be homeless -- left at Wed May 07 14:04:01 +0000 2008
  • Tim || Jon - the bigger they come the harder they fall. Who are these people who want to buy in Kingston to send their children to good schools? They are first time buyers. Which group is struggling to get on the ladder? First time buyers. Which group's (lack of) purchasing power drives (or stalls) the entire property market? Oh, that would be first time buyers. We will buy when the price is right and not before. Wait until 2009. -- left at Thu May 08 14:16:40 +0000 2008
  • Poussin || I love the way the only people commenting on these sites are first time buyers! Beware of the statistics that you read. Many are quoted out of context and are not worth the numbers they represent. It is true - some places will suffer - mainly because of massive over-building of standard (or substandard) 5+ floor blocks of flats. Vast numbers of these were bought by indiscriminating middle-income earners who thought they could make easy money. These are the properties that are really struggling. Undeniably there just aren't many properties on the market - the only statistic you can trust. And they are proving harder to flog as people are nervous and also cannot get mortgages (mainly first time buyers). Predominantly, the only people selling are those who have to. My view - the media will get fed up of talking about property price crashes; we'll get more summer flooding, Gordon Brown will resign, or Prince William will get engaged, and they'll turn their attentions to this. They, at the end of the day, want to sell papers. -- left at Tue May 20 09:27:19 +0000 2008
  • Fiona, Kingston Upon Thames, KT2 || I'm certainly not a first time buyer and I actually sold 2 properties last year (properties which I had at the time bought to live in and then moved on and rented out). I've been renting myself for over two years as I could see this crash was bound to happen - and it is. Check on the house price crash website for further information. I'm in no hurry to buy as it's so much cheaper renting this lovely house I'm in. I'm going to wait at least 2 years: by then some properties will be 50% cheaper. -- left at Fri May 23 11:15:11 +0000 2008
  • Bernie || It may be true that the people who are selling are predominantly those who need to sell, but it would be unwise to overlook the fact that those sales are the ones that are cumulatively impacting upon the average price. As they are currently selling low to extract themselves from a tight spot, or to attract buyers from the smaller pool who can get a mortgage, then we are seeing average prices fall. As the average falls, then sentiment changes and it becomes a "buyers market". Replacing those sellers will always be further batches of sellers: there will always be people who need to sell and it would be a nonsense to suggest that the masses will stay put because they cannot make the sort of profit they would have done by selling say a year ago. Peoples' circumstances always change. And the volume of property on the market, whether large or small by historical standards, does not set the price. Prices are set by those parties who agree the sale. If you have sellers who need to sell and buyers who cannot or will not overstretch themselves then prices will fall, regardless of overall volumes. The media probably will get fed up of talking about the crash but the crash is not media-driven nor media-fuelled so it's difficult to see the relevance of that point. It would also be dangerous to assume the problem is confined to the new flat developments or buy-to-let, as described in the post above. Prices are falling in London across the whole range of property types. One final unfounded assumption is that the only posters here are first time buyers. Otherwise, not a bad post. -- left at Tue May 27 12:33:58 +0000 2008
  • Tim || I don't think the only posters here are first-time buyers. I'm taking a wild guess that at least some of them are home owners who have paid over the odds and are presently in denial over the painful devaluation of their property that's happening right now. Prices fell 2.5% in the last month alone according to Nationwide. That's got to hurt, unless of course you bought your property as a home to live in, not as a risky investment, in which case price falls shouldn't matter. -- left at Thu May 29 15:15:30 +0000 2008

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