Sold price history
The typical home in New Estate last sold for £175,000. Over the past decade prices are +105% in cash — but +38% once inflation is stripped out.
Cash prices in New Estate look like they’ve climbed +105% in ten years. Adjust for inflation and the real gain is +38% — the difference is inflation, not wealth. Toggle the chart to see it.
The most recent homes sold here, straight from the HM Land Registry record.
| Date | Address | Type | Price | £/m² |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 23 May 2023 | 1 New Estate· NG33 4QL | Semi-detachedFreehold | £290,000 | — |
| 3 March 2023 |
| 3 New Estate· NG33 4QL |
| Semi-detachedFreehold |
| £240,000 |
| — |
| 24 June 2016 | 8 New Estate· NG33 4QL | Semi-detachedFreehold | £175,000 | — |
| 9 May 2014 | 3 New Estate· NG33 4QL | Semi-detachedFreehold | £116,000 | — |
| 15 June 2012 | 4 New Estate· NG33 4QL | Semi-detachedFreehold | £129,000 | — |
Category A (standard) sales. £/m² shown where an EPC floor-area match exists.
The median sold price in New Estate is £175,000, based on 5 sales recorded by HM Land Registry.
Over the past decade prices in New Estate are +105% in cash terms, and +38% after adjusting for inflation (ONS CPIH).
We don't yet have enough matched EPC floor-area data to publish a reliable price per square metre for New Estate.
Figures update monthly from HM Land Registry. The most recent sale here was recorded on 23 May 2023; the latest two months may be incomplete while sales register.
Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right, licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Figures are the median of Category A (standard) sold prices; real-terms values use ONS CPIH. See our methodology.
Sold prices for England & Wales from the official record — with the real-terms story competitors leave out.
Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right, licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Set in Fraunces & IBM Plex Sans.