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

Ratio of house prices to median earnings, 1997