Check sold house prices for any UK address
See every recorded sale for an address — price paid, date, property type and tenure — from HM Land Registry. 30 years of history, included in every report from £19.
Data source: HM Land Registry Price Paid Data · Included in every report from £19
30 years
Of transaction history — every sale back to 1995 for England and Wales
27 million+
Residential sales in the Land Registry Price Paid dataset
1–3 months
Typical lag before a completed sale appears in the public record
What the sold price check includes
Full transaction history
Every registered sale for the address since 1995, shown in date order. If the property has changed hands four times in 10 years, you'll see all four transactions — prices, dates, and any price reductions between sales.
Date and price paid
The exact transfer date and registered sale price. If the current vendor bought 18 months ago for £230,000 and is asking £285,000, you'll see that — directly from the Land Registry.
Property type
Whether the property is detached, semi-detached, terraced or a flat — as recorded at the time of sale. Useful for comparing against other sales of the same type nearby.
Freehold or leasehold
The tenure at each recorded sale. A leasehold entry is a prompt to check the current lease term, as it affects mortgage availability and resale value.
New-build indicator
The Land Registry flags new-build sales. New-build prices are often elevated relative to the resale market — knowing whether a comparable sale was a new build affects how useful it is as a benchmark.
Comparable sales in the area
As well as the specific address, Property Snapshot shows recent sales in the same street or postcode — giving you comparable evidence to assess whether the asking price is in line with the local market.
Check any UK address now
Sold Price Check included in every Property Snapshot report from £19.
Frequently asked questions
How far back does the sold price history go?
HM Land Registry Price Paid Data covers every residential sale in England and Wales since January 1995. That's over 30 years of transaction history for most addresses. Older data may be patchier for some rural areas or unusual property types, but the vast majority of UK addresses have at least 10–15 years of sold price records.
Does this include Scotland and Northern Ireland?
HM Land Registry covers England and Wales only. Sold prices in Scotland are published by Registers of Scotland; Northern Ireland data is held by Land and Property Services. Property Snapshot uses the appropriate registry for the address.
How quickly are new sales added?
HM Land Registry typically publishes sales data 1–3 months after completion. A house sold in March may not appear until May or June. This lag is inherent to the registry process — the data is published when the registration is completed, not when contracts exchange.
Can I use sold prices to negotiate?
Absolutely. If you can show that equivalent properties on the same street sold for materially less in the past 12 months, or that the current vendor purchased the property recently at a significantly lower price, you have a factual basis for negotiating below the asking price. Land Registry data is public and the seller's agent knows it — a data-backed offer is harder to dismiss.
Does the data include new-build prices?
Yes, Land Registry Price Paid Data includes new-build sales. However, new-build prices are often inflated relative to the second-hand market due to developer incentives — a new-build sale at £350,000 with a 5% deposit contribution is not directly comparable to a resale at the same price. We flag new-build status where it appears in the registry.
What's included alongside the price?
Each Land Registry entry includes the sale price, date of transfer, property type (detached, semi-detached, terraced, flat), whether it was a new build, and whether freehold or leasehold. We include all of this in the Property Snapshot sold price history.