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You searched for listings within tw11. There are currently 69 price drops in this postcode. Recently updated listings are highlighted in pink. Click here to sort by last updated date.
View other nearby postcodes: tw12 tw2 tw1 kt2 kt1 tw10 kt8 kt7 kt6 tw13
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| address | type | original price | current price | change | days on market | postcode | |
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springfield road TW11 | 2 bedroom cottage | £425,000 | £299,950 | DOWN 29% | 386 days | (tw11) |
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twickenham road TW11 | 6 bedroom semi detached | £1,875,000 | £1,450,000 | DOWN 22% | 155 days | (tw11) |
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Twickenham Road, TW11, London TW11 8AW | 0 bedroom semi detached | £1,875,000 | £1,450,000 | DOWN 22% | 156 days | (tw11) |
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queens road TW11 | 3 bedroom house | £579,950 | £449,950 | DOWN 22% | 274 days | (tw11) |
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york road TW11 | 3 bedroom flat | £439,950 | £349,500 | DOWN 20% | 281 days | (tw11) |
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wick road TW11 | 2 bedroom cottage | £439,950 | £359,950 | DOWN 18% | 98 days | (tw11) |
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Coleshill Road, TW11, London TW11 0LL | 1 bedroom flat | £255,000 | £210,000 | DOWN 17% | 224 days | (tw11) |
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station road TW11 | 3 bedroom flat | £675,000 | £569,950 | DOWN 15% | 190 days | (tw11) |
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Teddington, London | 4 bedroom | £650,000 | £550,000 | DOWN 15% | 137 days | (tw11) |
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Cherwell Court, Broom Park, Teddington | 2 bedroom house | £350,000 | £299,950 | DOWN 14% | 44 days | (tw11) |
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View other nearby postcodes: tw12 tw2 tw1 kt2 kt1 tw10 kt8 kt7 kt6 tw13
Comments
- Wm Rushby || Let's see prices back to reality and that means at least a 25% lower than current laughable figures -- left at Tue Jan 15 20:44:20 +0000 2008
- Patrick, Teddington || The house price crash is here at last. Anyone thinking of buying now would be bonkers. Need to wait and rent for 2 years until prices reach bottom of barrel. Then we will be getting 2008 priced £1m houses for £600k I reckon. -- left at Sat Apr 12 14:21:09 +0000 2008
- Theo, Teddington || Hope you're right Patrick, I do a little victory punch every time I note a price reduction or see those heartening clusters of agents signs all for the same over priced little shoebox. I sold up last year and am renting and waiting! It's all going to plan so far but the rent is high here and of course maybe I can't borrow as much as I could a few weeks ago. It'll be very interesting to see what effect the stalled mortgage market has. Could be blood bath. -- left at Sun Apr 13 21:45:20 +0000 2008
- Rachel, Kingston Upon Thames || You're doing the victory punch and I'm doing the "yeehaa" Theo. I'm renting in Kingston and yes the rent is expensive...but nothing what I'm saving by holding off buying for 18 months or so. Will be well worth the wait...and we'll have a great choice of properties! -- left at Tue Apr 15 12:59:21 +0000 2008
- Jane || You're so wrong all you renters because things aren't going to go the way you think I'm sure of it. -- left at Thu Apr 17 16:07:24 +0000 2008
- Theo, Teddington || OK Jane, let's hear your theory. The London Borough of Richmond suffered London's biggest drop last month with 2.7 %. If it keeps going that way for 6 months we'll be back at 2006 prices. We're all ears! -- left at Mon Apr 21 21:30:51 +0000 2008
- Heather Alsop, Richmond || My friend in one of the big EA in this area tells me the EA industry is in panic. Sellers are slowly realising the only way to get a sale is to drop the prices - much as the sellers don't want to. EA jobs on the line around here as they are just not doing business. -- left at Thu Apr 24 11:15:35 +0000 2008
- lisa || Jane is an estate agent - she must be in panic mode! -- left at Fri Apr 25 09:07:25 +0000 2008
- damian, teddington - || What's interesting about the vengeful 'renters' is that as soon as they're on the ladder - they will be praying for a boom again! All sellers should create shortage of houses by not selling -natural demand will soon bring stability to the market again! a 10% sliip is good, a 30% slip and the we're be in economic recession and we're ALL stuffed including the non-lending banks! -- left at Wed Apr 30 09:01:54 +0000 2008
- Alexi || Alexi Teddington - I realise that the market is sliding but i believe that the EA are hugely exacerbating the situation.I have had personal experience of one of the largest EA "bullying" to drive the price down even lower than what might be achieved in time. Why? - ME thinks all for short term gain for them - to fund their overheads and commission based salaries.Yes the market is slipping but don`t be bullied. The EA are only interested in themselves. A pruning of the number on offer may not be a bad thing. -- left at Thu May 01 10:59:12 +0000 2008
- Theo, Teddington || It's likely that history will show that this government's lax attitude to house price inflation to be a total disaster both economically and socially. Future generations will look back in disbelief at the folly of it all. Our only hope is a sharp correction now to stop housing being seen as a way to make easy money and to leave them do what they do best - be lived in. -- left at Thu May 01 21:52:43 +0000 2008
- Gary || Gary, Teddington: House prices will drop 30 to 50% over the next few years. Worse than the 90’s crash!. Anyone who believes prices will stay stable or go up are living in a fools paradise!. Markets are driven by GREED and FEAR. We have had the greed now prepare yourself for the fear. -- left at Sun May 04 07:04:35 +0000 2008
- damian - teddington || Gary - simple economics and the need for the lending institutions to 'make' money and secure their 'assets' - (e.g. property they have lent against) will ensure that a drop of 30-50&% is quite unfeasible. Any massive drop of 50% means that a whole new category of 'sub prime' would be created as most houses bought post 2002 would be worth less then their mortgages,& I don't believe that will happen. Eventually lending criteria will become easier and the gov' will be forced to change stamp duty. Greed in property is driven by the greed of gov' who have destroyed peoples confidence in the pensions system, that's where the house boom stems from - no coincidence that it started the same time that Gordon Brown raided the pensions!! -- left at Fri May 09 09:27:02 +0000 2008
- Gary Teddington || @ damian - Teddington: The simple economics are that the UK is in far too much debt! Lending institutions have already repriced risk. That’s why getting a mortgage has become difficult to get and expensive. This is set to continue. The UK has a huge sub prime ticking time bomb. It comes in the form of “Buy to let” and “Self Cert” mortgages. The sub prime is not a problem until prices drop. 10% drop should get the ball rolling. As for the government, they may tinker while Rome burns. Even scrapping stamp duty would not be enough to stop the rot! In my opinion if you have your pension tied up in property now, it may be a good time to review the situation. -- left at Sat May 10 12:04:05 +0000 2008
- Tim || Jane, who posted Apr 17th: are you still sure of it?! -- left at Thu May 29 15:18:00 +0000 2008
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