More Scottish Property News.
Scottish house prices start to recover
Housing recovery at risk as stamp duty break ends
Edinburgh no longer most expensive region
Quiet, well-behaved neighbours guaranteed
UK house prices climb 1.6 percent over month.
House prices at highest level for a year
Stamp Duty Holiday coming to an end - estate agents expect rush of sales
East Kilbride claims Scotland's Biggest Town from Paisley
Home prices rise with hopes slump is over
Scottish property market 'starting to show signs of recovery'
Green shoots spotted in Scottish housing market
Scotland's two largest estate agencies join s1homes
Scottish housing market showing signs of revival
Buyers are back but face bigger mortgages
Experts far more upbeat about UK house market
Mortgage approvals continue to rise
Blessing or curse? Controversial Home Reports still divide opinion
Property prices down by 4.3per cent in year's first quarter
Scottish housing market in heavy slump
Signs of housing market pick up as mortgage lending rises 16%
Stamp duty holiday extended to end of year
50bn to boost mortgage lending
£60m scheme to help first-time buyers launched
Surprise rise in mortgage approvals
Put your home on the market for free
Overseas buyers snap up bargains in Scottish upmarket properties
Recovery hope for housing market
More sellers opt for fixed prices in bid to find a buyer
Mortgage rates fall while house prices rise
Estate agents claim Housing market will recover soon
Corum says downturn is bottoming out
Millions of homeowners to benefit from interest rate cuts
House prices in Scotland fall less steeply than rest of UK
Mortgage boost for struggling homeowners
Hoping for a good report - December brings new home pack
Figures reveal huge drop in the number of Scottish houses sold
All change for sellers - Home Reports imminent
Scottish homes drop by £7500 in three months
Lawyers want introduction of home reports to be delayed
Cost of Home Reports sparks fresh debate
Confused about Home Reports? s1homes helps you make sense of it all
Stamp duty suspended in bid to boost property market
Scottish housing market shrinks but prices rise
Scots house prices still on the way up
Scotland's housing market is battling against the credit crunch
Scots house prices keep on growing but credit crunch is having an effect
Scotland stands alone in UK as house prices stay afloat
Scottish house prices to outperform rest of UK
Scottish property factors to face probe by watchdog
Big rise in Scotland's million pound properties, Edinburgh leads the way
Scottish house prices rise (slightly) as UK crashes
Clydebank Housing Development to be expanded
Scots house prices buck national trend
Single Surveys set to become law
500 new homes for Ruchill in Glasgow
Scottish house prices outstrip the UK in 2007
Scottish house prices to keep on rising
House prices in Scotland rise 7.1%
Gradual slowdown predicted in "robust" Scottish housing market
Scotland to escape UK housing market gloom
Aberdeen & Edinburgh break £200,000 house price barrier
60% jump in househunters turned down for mortgages
Scottish estate agency goes carbon neutral !
Tenants allowed to check their landlord
Scottish Rural House Prices Double
Scotland's home prices break the £140k barrier
Scottish housing boom set to slow
House buyers pay for extra room
Property prices still rising fast in Edinburgh and Aberdeen
Scots house prices race upwards at double UK rate
Price gap between Scotland and England closes
Scotland heads annual house price rises
Herald's new guide reveals houses for sale under £50,000
New survey confirms Scottish house prices rising faster
Scots house prices rise at twice UK average
House prices rising fastest in Scotland
Warning as UK property prices rise 8.2%
The shape of New Build to come
Major council plans for Dalkeith housing
A country house near to the city
Number of £1m homes soars over 100 mark
House prices set for soft landing
Pace of house price rises on the increase
Scots still have hottest properties
Stylish place to work, rest and play
Population decline to hit house prices
English home buyers head north
Luxury Estate planned for South Glasgow
Scottish Property News
House prices in Scotland fall less steeply than rest of UK
Originally published: 06.01.2009
The Nationwide Building Society reported that the UK's annual house values fell by a record 15.9% in 2008 but that in Scotland prices went down by 8.1% over the year.
Prices in Scotland actually saw a 0.1% increase in the last quarter of the year - the only part of the UK to experience a rise between October and December. And Scots are the most optimistic about the future, with 11% believing prices will increase in the next six months.
But Nationwide said housing market conditions remained uncertain.
Chief economist Fionnuala Earley said: "Scotland continues to experience the smallest falls in the UK.
"While prices in Scotland are 8.1% lower than last year, Scotland was the only part of the UK to show a seasonally adjusted increase in prices in October-December.
"While prices increased by only 0.1%, this follows a fall of 5.1% in the third quarter (Q3)-larger than the UK average in Q3 - and suggests that conditions in Scotland are still somewhat uncertain."
The average house price in Scotland stands at £138,941.
The most expensive area is Edinburgh, where the average home costs £241,617, while Fife is the most affordable region, with home buyers spending around £131,565 on average.
Renfrewshire and Inverclyde saw the largest annual fall in prices (15%), followed by Dunbartonshire and North Lanarkshire (12%).
Nationwide said all regions of the UK had seen steep price falls during 2008, with Northern Ireland leading the way, with prices 34.2% lower during the final quarter of the year compared with the same period of 2007.
East Anglia was the next worst hit with a drop of 16.6%, while prices fell by more than 15% in London, the surrounding area and the south east.
Scotland saw the least dramatic falls while the north of England recorded an 11% slide.
The average cost of a UK home dropped by a further 2.5% in December, dashing hopes that November's slide of 0.4% marked a stabilisation in the rate at which prices were falling.
Nationwide warned that prices were likely to have further to fall before significant numbers of buyers returned to the market as affordability measures still remained well above their long-run average.
The annual change, which was the biggest since the group began collecting data in this format in 1991, left the average house price at £153,048 - £20,000 less than in December last year and back down to levels seen in the spring of 2005.
Fionnuala Earley, Nationwide's chief economist, said: "2008 has been a year of turmoil in the UK housing market. The disruption in the financial markets worsened throughout 2008 and had larger implications for the real economy than we anticipated a year ago.
"This time last year we expected the housing market to cool quickly as affordability was poor and economic conditions looked set to weaken, but we did not anticipate the speed of house price falls or the extent of the global and domestic economic slowdown."
She added that conditions remained highly volatile going into 2009, making it difficult to give a specific forecast for the year.
The group's figures are in line with statistics reported by Britain's biggest mortgage lender, Halifax, at the end of last week, which showed that house prices had fallen by 16.2% during the final quarter of 2008 compared with the same period of 2007, after losing 2.2% of their value in December.
Nationwide said demand from consumers was likely to be an important factor in 2009, with people unlikely to be upbeat about the prospects for house prices until the economy and labour markets stabilised, hindering the pace of the recovery.
But it added that there was now likely to be significant pent-up demand from potential first-time buyers who had been priced out of the market since 2003.
It estimates that as many as 750,000 potential buyers may have been locked out of the market between 2003 and 2007 - more than the estimated total number of transactions carried out during the whole of 2008.
This pent-up demand, which will have been exacerbated by the fall in the number of new homes being built since the end of 2007, suggests house prices could recover quickly once activity in the market starts to rise again.
Ms Earley said: "The short-term outlook for the housing market is fairly weak. This should not be surprising given the economic and labour market conditions we expect to face.
"Sharp cuts in interest rates will provide support to existing and potential homeowners and pave the way for the improvement in affordability which will eventually encourage buyers back into the market."

