Edinburgh Ranks as Top UK City for Residential Investment
Posted by Colliers on 4th January 2022 -
All change in the top three cities in Colliers’ analysis for H2 2021
Edinburgh’s solid house price growth, highly educated residents and expected population growth has seen it take the top spot for residential investment in Colliers’ latest Top UK Residential Investment Cities report.
The Scottish capital moved up from second place, pushing Cambridge into the runner-up position, while London rose from fourth into third position in the H2 2021 report.
Less positive GDP growth and employment forecasts saw Cambridge knocked off of the top spot in the second publication of the analysis of 20 UK cities against 20 indicators covering economy, property, education and liveability. Average earnings declined in the city while income inequality rose, and unemployment forecasts were revised to be less favourable than six months ago.
Bristol and Manchester dropped out of the top five rankings, being replaced by Oxford in fourth and Belfast as fifth.
Andrew White, head of Residential and International Properties at Colliers said: “Six months since we first published our Investment Cities report and not one UK city has stayed in the same place. All of the cities we’ve examined are great locations for investment, however the reasons to invest in them are changeable.
“Many of the locations in the top ten have great educational institutions which make them attractive to domestic and overseas investors alike. They also have good opportunities for employment which ensures retention of these students, fuelling the steady house price and rental growth many of them see. However, they’re not homogenous locations, they all have their different strengths as well; Belfast has better rental yields compared to London, while Edinburgh has lower rates of unemployment and high scores for life satisfaction from residents.”
Colliers’ top ten cities for investment in H2 2021 are:
1. Edinburgh (up one place)
2. Cambridge (down one place)
3. London (up one place)
4. Oxford (up nine places)
5. Belfast (up two places)
6. Manchester (down one place)
7. Bristol (down four places)
8. Glasgow (up three places)
9. Milton Keynes (up one place)
10. Reading (down two places)
Oliver Kolodseike, author of the report, said: “During the last six months there has been a fair amount of movement among the cities in our ranking. Oxford shot up nine places into fourth due to improvements in the income inequality, earnings and life satisfaction indicators. The city has a low unemployment rate and the average earnings growth rate has increased from 1.3 per cent to 12.3 per cent since our last survey.
“By looking at 20 indicators we can really examine and hone in on the reasons why a city is a good place to live and ultimately invest in. While in our overall analysis we’ve applied equal weights across the four overarching pillars these can be tailored depending on each investor’s priorities.”