Most affordable places for first-time buyers revealed
- Published
The most affordable - and the least affordable - places for first-time buyers have been revealed by the UK's largest mortgage lender, the Halifax.
Compared to local earnings, the cheapest places to buy are mostly in western Scotland and northern England.
The most expensive are all in London.
East Dunbartonshire, on the northern fringes of Glasgow, is the most-affordable place in the UK. On average, house prices here are just 2.6 times local annual earnings.
By contrast, the least-affordable place is Brent in north London, where house prices are on average 12.5 times local earnings.
The Halifax data also shows that first-time buyers face the highest prices in London, paying £384,000 on average, compared to just £110,00 in Northern Ireland.
The number of people buying houses or flats for the first time is now on the increase, according to the Halifax.
Its figures show that 154,200 buyers were successful in the first half of 2016, compared to 140,500 in the same period the previous year - a 10% rise.
However, the longer-term picture is not so rosy.
Government figures released earlier this week show that the number of first-time buyers in England has fallen by a third in the past decade.
The Halifax said the government's Help to Buy scheme, launched in April 2013, would have helped to boost first-time buys.