London Planning Authorities

Ratio of house prices to median earnings, 2017

Ratio of house prices to median earnings, based on 2017 data

1Kensington & Chelsea4,151.15%
2Westminster2,431.68%
3Hammersmith & Fulham2,102.88%
4Richmond-upon-Thames2,022.34%
5Camden1,992.29%
6Wandsworth1,973.62%
7Haringey1,717.45%
8Barnet1,659.77%
9Brent1,659.09%
10Ealing1,602.83%
11Harrow1,599.74%
12Merton1,586.39%
13Hackney1,576.54%
14Waltham Forest1,573.33%
15Islington1,562.98%
16Kingston-upon-Thames1,556.31%
17City of London1,483.26%
18Lambeth1,478.79%
19Bromley1,475.57%
20Redbridge1,438.90%
21Southwark1,409.54%
22Enfield1,381.55%
23Sutton1,313.29%
24Lewisham1,291.52%
25Greenwich1,286.96%
26Newham1,269.09%
27Hillingdon1,235.27%
28Havering1,201.35%
29Hounslow1,157.71%
30Croydon1,136.75%
31Bexley1,114.44%
32Barking & Dagenham1,050.68%
33Tower Hamlets992.53%

Inner-London Borough

Outer-London Borough

(As defined by London Councils)

♦ Council Political Control

★ 2016 Mayoral Election Result

Sources

1) Average House Prices by Borough, Land Registry 2) "House price to workplace-based earnings ratio", Office for National Statistics, 29 March 2019 3) "London Elections Results 2016, Wards, Boroughs, Constituency", Greater London Authority (GLA).

Related

10 Year House Price Increase