At a Glance
Average Property Price - MK19
£404,481
68
National percentile
Average Monthly Rent - MK
£1,276
68
National percentile
Average Net Household Income - MK19
£44,945
76
National percentile
Flat / Maisonette Yield - MK
6.6%
93
National percentile
10-Year Annualised Price Growth - MK19
2.3%
12
National percentile
10-Year Annualised Rent Growth - MK
4.3%
74
National percentile
Property Price & Volume Trends
The average property price in MK19 is £404,000, placing it among the more expensive areas nationally. However, price growth over the past decade has been slow at 2.3% annually, significantly below the national trend. Transaction activity has softened recently, with 167 sales in the latest year compared to a 10-year average of 211 per annum.
Rent & Yield Trends
Average monthly rent stands at £1,276, also among the higher levels nationally. Rental growth over ten years has been notably strong at 4.3% per year, outpacing the national average. The flat yield has improved to 6.6%, up from a 10-year average of 5.5%, reflecting improving returns for landlords in recent market conditions.
Income & Affordability Trends
Household income in MK19 is above average nationally at £44,945. The price-to-income ratio of 8.9x indicates that property remains less affordable than it was in 2016, when the ratio stood at 8.7x. Rental affordability has similarly tightened, with rent now consuming 33.8% of household income compared to 27% in 2016.
Resident Demographic Profile
The area has a notably stronger concentration of families aged 35–49 (21.7% vs 18.7% nationally) and those aged 50–64 (20.7% vs 19.8% nationally), reflecting its appeal to established households. Young adults aged 16–24 are underrepresented at 7.9% against the national average of 11%. Housing is dominated by owner-occupation, with 37.5% owning with a mortgage and 35% owning outright—significantly higher than the national average for mortgaged properties (27%). Shared ownership at 3.7% is notably elevated. The employment profile shows overrepresentation of managers (18.2% vs 13.4% nationally) and professionals (22.3% vs 20.5%), with underrepresentation in caring roles and plant/machine occupations.
