THE NUMBER of residential properties sold in Bromsgrove dropped by 55 per cent compared to the same time last year, the latest figures have shown.
This year, 139 houses or flats changed hands in the borough between April and June.
During the same period last year, 312 were successfully sold.
The figures relate to flats and a variety of house types, including terraced, semi-detached and detached.
Although the Bromsgrove district area residential property market (B61, B60, B45 and DY9) has slowed in the past year, certain postal districts and certain property types have slowed more than others.
Bromsgrove compared to the West Midlands and UK
While the number of property sales in Bromsgrove was down by 55 per cent in the year up to the second quarter of 2025, they were similar to the regional and national averages. The number of transactions was down 54 per cent in the West Midlands and down 54 per cent in England and Wales.
This means the Bromsgrove property market has succumbed just slightly more to the slowdown than the regional and national markets, at least in transaction volume terms.
Despite the slowdown, property values in Bromsgrove district have increased.
Bromsgrove property prices on the up
Estimated property values in Bromsgrove increased in the year up to the second quarter of 2025.
Property values in Bromsgrove district estimated to have increased by between 0.9 and 5.7 per cent between the second quarter of 2024 and during the same period in 2025, depending on property type. In absolute terms this equates to an increase of between £3,600 and £13,000, depending on property type.
Next year’s forecast
Looking forward to the year ahead, to the second quarter of 2026, all property types in the Bromsgrove are forecast to appreciate in value, albeit at different rates.
Detached properties are expected to increase the most, by 2.5 per cent, followed by terraced properties (1.6 per cent), flats (1.5 per cent) and semi-detached properties (1.3 percent).
The data used to prepare this report come from Land Registry records on residential property transactions for England and Wales, and from other public data sources.
The report was prepared by Big Picture Property – click here for more. People can check out how their own individual property will increase or decrease in value over the next year, three years or five years.
The data are used is under Open Government Licence v3.0.
‘People with any questions or comments can email the author, Dr David Grover, at [email protected]. People can see how the value of their own property in Redditch or Bromsgrove is expected to change over the next 1,3 and 5 years by visiting http://bigpicture.property/.’
People with any questions or commons can email them to: author, Dr David Grover, at [email protected].
