House Prices > Wolverhampton > WV4
Year | Average Price | Transactions |
---|---|---|
2025 (proj.) | £260,000 | 403 |
2024 | £246,500 | 300 |
2023 | £237,800 | 374 |
2022 | £234,400 | 392 |
2021 | £222,700 | 514 |
2020 | £201,900 | 379 |
2019 | £188,800 | 442 |
2018 | £179,200 | 423 |
Year after year, property prices in WV4 have drifted steadily upward, like the slow, persistent current of the Smestow Brook. Since 2018, buyers have watched the average price of homes rise nearly every season, shaping a market that feels more desirable, and at times, almost exclusive. This pattern makes us reflect on what it really means when a suburb’s bricks and mortar gather value as if they were rare minerals, not just houses on sleepy Wolverhampton lanes.
At M0VE, we have noticed:
Even so, the projected leap in 2025’s average prices contains a spark of promise for existing homeowners, but, for buyers, raises the stakes. It is not every year you see such resilience in value, particularly in pockets like WV4.
Perhaps buying in WV4 is a bit like planting an orchard on gentle Black Country hills. Patience and faith are needed, but the rewards, over time, can be lush and tangible.
Avg. Property Price: 356K
Avg. Size of Property
1,275 sq/ft
Avg. Cost Per Sq/ft
£288 sq/ft
Total transactions
251 (since 2021)
Avg. Property Price: 233K
Avg. Size of Property
997 sq/ft
Avg. Cost Per Sq/ft
£239 sq/ft
Total transactions
545 (since 2021)
Avg. Property Price: 166K
Avg. Size of Property
867 sq/ft
Avg. Cost Per Sq/ft
£191 sq/ft
Total transactions
286 (since 2021)
Avg. Property Price: 107K
Avg. Size of Property
644 sq/ft
Avg. Cost Per Sq/ft
£165 sq/ft
Total transactions
64 (since 2021)
The property market in WV4 has been anything but predictable in recent years. Prices have swung, buyers have zigged and zagged, and the dividing lines between different property types have grown sharper and more distinctive. If buying in Wolverhampton used to feel routine, it now requires a careful, tactical mindset—almost like trying to score a last-minute goal at Molineux.
Detached homes sit right at the pinnacle—spacious, comfortable, and increasingly aspirational. Their transaction count since 2021 remains far more subdued than their semi-detached and terraced cousins, hinting at a clear supply squeeze. Is the extra space and privacy worth swallowing the higher price per square foot? For many, the answer is yes—buyers appear undeterred, hungry for green lawns and double garages even as costs nudge towards premium territory.
Semi-detached and terraced properties are the true engine of WV4’s churn. With hundreds of transactions since 2021, they provide a crucial middle ground: enough space for a proper family life, with price points that don’t feel like a gamble at the casino. These homes drive movement, underpinning stability for both owner-occupiers and ambitious investors alike.
Flats, meanwhile, continue to punch below their weight. Compact, pragmatic, but the market for them in WV4 remains relatively modest. Demand hasn’t surged to match other types, perhaps a nod to the enduring desire for gardens, attics, and a bit more breathing room (especially post-pandemic).
The upshot? Buying in WV4 today feels a bit like grabbing a season ticket just as the local team’s fortunes are picking up: full of possibilities, undercurrents, and the need to watch every move closely.
Where others generalise, we get precise. Through careful transformation of trusted datasets (like EPC and Land Registry), we engineer insightful, unusually clean valuations for properties on every UK street. Understand how it all comes together
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