logo
Sandbanks keeps crown as UK's most expensive seaside town

Sandbanks keeps crown as UK's most expensive seaside town

Times11 hours ago
Sandbanks in Dorset has retained its crown as the UK's most expensive coastal area to buy a house, with an average asking price of £1.28 million.
While properties in the Poole neighbourhood, dubbed 'Britain's Palm Beach', have fallen 3 per cent year-on-year, asking prices in the area are still over three times more expensive than the national average of £378,240, according to analysis by Rightmove.
Research by the online property portal showed that Sandbanks is now the only coastal area in Britain with average asking prices above the £1 million mark.
• Homes in exclusive seaside areas fall in value after tax raids
Sandbanks, which has been home to many millionaires, including Harry Redknapp, the football manager, and Sir Geoffrey Boycott, the cricketer, has topped the list for a number of years.
Canford Cliffs, also in Poole, came in second place despite average asking prices in the area down 9 per cent year-on-year. Buyers looking for a house in the area can expect to pay an average of £974,635. It was followed by Milford-on-Sea in Hampshire, which had an average asking price of £728,460.
Saltcoats in Ayrshire, Scotland, was again named the cheapest coastal area despite seeing a 13 per cent jump in average asking price to £122,208. Peterlee, in Country Durham, saw a 6 per cent increase in its average asking price to £122,246, but was ranked the second cheapest coastal area in the UK.
Other cheap coastal areas on Rightmove's list included Ashington and Blyth, both in Northumberland, Bootle in Merseyside, and Grimsby in Lincolnshire.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How to leave Starmer's high-tax Britain behind: The experts' full emigration guide for moving to Malta... a sun-soaked, English-speaking haven with low tax and low crime
How to leave Starmer's high-tax Britain behind: The experts' full emigration guide for moving to Malta... a sun-soaked, English-speaking haven with low tax and low crime

Daily Mail​

time31 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

How to leave Starmer's high-tax Britain behind: The experts' full emigration guide for moving to Malta... a sun-soaked, English-speaking haven with low tax and low crime

In these turbulent times for the UK economy, a growing number of financially comfortable people are looking for ways to protect their savings. And for many, starting a new life in Malta is a tempting solution. 'We see more people moving from Britain than anywhere else,' says estate agent Grahame Salt. 'They like the Mediterranean lifestyle, the low crime rate, the fact that English is spoken here and, above all, the low taxes.'

Angela Rayner reveals why she'd never want to be prime minister
Angela Rayner reveals why she'd never want to be prime minister

The Independent

time40 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Angela Rayner reveals why she'd never want to be prime minister

Angela Rayner has said she would never want to be prime minister because 'it would age me by 10 years within six months'. 'Have you ever seen a prime minister after a year or two in government?' the deputy prime minister joked. The morning after Sir Keir Starmer scraped through a major rebellion over his watered-down welfare reforms, Ms Rayner was asked whether she is waiting in the wings to take the embattled PM's place. 'Not a chance,' she told ITV's Lorraine. She said: 'It would age me by 10 years within six months, it does, anyone who has been prime minister it is a very challenging job.' Amid mounting questions about the prime minister's future following a disastrous first year in power, she defended Sir Keir, saying he is 'doing the job for Britain', adding 'there's been a lot going on' in the 12 months since the PM entered Downing Street. She said: 'He's been all around the world trying to repair the relationships in Europe. We've got the trade deals that the previous government wasn't able to do, tackling the things like the tariffs that the president in the US wanted to put onto the UK, which would have damaged our economy again. 'There's a lot going on, and the prime minister's been […] here, there and everywhere, doing the job for Britain.' It comes after polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice referred to Sir Keir's first year in office as 'the worst start for any newly elected prime minister'. He told Times Radio that the prime minister was 'never especially popular' and that 'the public still don't know what he stands for.' Asked if she would be interested in being prime minister at some point, Ms Rayner told the ITV programme: 'No'. She said that she is 'passionate' about issues including workers' rights and council housing. 'I'm very interested in delivering for the people of this country, because … to be elected as an MP from my background was incredible,' she said. 'Having that opportunity to serve my community that have raised me, looked after me, given me opportunities, and I don't forget that. And to be deputy prime minister of this country … it's got to count for something.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store