
Birmingham Property Market 2026: Prices and Best Areas
Explore Birmingham's 2026 property market with average prices around £255k. Discover the best areas to buy, from family-friendly Harborne to creative Digbeth.
Latest news from Birmingham.

Explore Birmingham's 2026 property market with average prices around £255k. Discover the best areas to buy, from family-friendly Harborne to creative Digbeth.

Discover the best things to do in Birmingham 2026, from Commonwealth Games venues to family-friendly attractions. Cultural hotspots, parks and experiences for all.

Discover 50+ authentic South Asian restaurants in Birmingham's Balti Triangle. Find the best balti curry spots along Ladypool Road and Stratford Road in Sparkhill.

Compare Birmingham living costs to London. Find current rent prices, average expenses and neighbourhood costs for 2026 in this complete guide.

Explore updated Birmingham transport links in 2026. New Metro extensions to Digbeth and Wolverhampton, plus frequent rail services from New Street station.

Discover Birmingham's finest dining from Michelin-starred Opheem to legendary Balti Triangle curry houses. Your guide to Sparkhill, Jewellery Quarter and beyond.

Discover the best areas to live in Birmingham in 2026. From family-friendly Harborne to vibrant city centre spots, find your ideal neighbourhood based on schools, transport and community.

Explore how Commonwealth Games legacy, fintech expansion, and £130bn regional GDP are reshaping Birmingham's business landscape in 2026.

Buyers and sellers on both sides of the city are recalibrating—and in some cases pausing—as the Bank of England signals rate cuts ahead.

Rezoning proposals could make this north-west Birmingham suburb the city’s next property hotspot.

Solihull, Harborne, and Edgbaston lead the pack as high-earning professionals and retirees trade city-centre flats and family homes for smaller, upmarket spaces.

Harborne and Digbeth see contrasting fortunes as latest Land Registry data signals steady yet uneven recovery across city districts.

Moves to allow taller and denser projects will reshape Selly Oak and Digbeth as city targets 7,000 new homes by 2031.

Competitive asking prices and resilient tenant demand put this north Birmingham district at the head of the city’s buy-to-let pack.

House prices and activity are changing fast in Brum, but the picture today looks starkly different from the city’s pandemic-era frenzy.

House prices and buyer competition have shifted dramatically in Birmingham since the pandemic-fuelled frenzy.

Rental returns in north Birmingham’s Kingstanding outpace all other suburbs, drawing fresh attention from buy-to-let investors.

Birmingham’s lakeside enclave sees homes snapped up, as buyers pay a premium for life by the water’s edge.
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