Property Solvers analyses five years of HM Land Registry figures to find Newark’s cheapest and most expensive homes
From million-pound homes to hidden bargains, a new property market breakdown revealed the priciest and most affordable streets in Newark, writes Megan Daley.
Compiled by Property Solvers, the data analyses five years of HM Land Registry figures, highlighting where in Newark homes are commanding premium prices, and where buyers are snapping up the cheapest homes.
Ruban Selvanayagam, co-founder of Property Solvers, said: “To keep the data meaningful, we only included streets where there were at least three sales.
“That said, individual properties in Newark have varied widely – one on Beacon Hill Road recently sold for £1,092,000, while homes on Portland Court, Harcourt Street and Queens Road have sold for as little as £56,000.”
At the top of the list is Beacon Hill Road, where four properties sold for an average of £653,000, with one home going for over £1 million.
Close behind is Grant Close, where five homes fetched an average of £510,200, and Farndon Road, with an average price of £505,000 across three sales.
Other high-end streets include: Barnby Road (with average house prices of £457,142), London Road (£443,333), The Friary (Appletongate) – (£440,833), Elm Close (£436,000), and Willows Walk on Middlebeck (£407,412).
Meanwhile, at the more affordable end of the spectrum, Clover Gardens was named the cheapest street, with three homes selling for an average of just £70,916. Portland Court (£72,666) and Forster Avenue (£77,750) also made up the bottom three of the list.
Other low-priced locations include College Close ( with average prices of £83,250), Thorpe Close (£86,166), Apple Tree Close (£88,071), and Lombard Street (£97,495).
The difference between the most and least expensive streets is more than half a million pounds.