Game, set and match for Wimbledon house prices
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Game, set and match for Wimbledon house prices



Game, set and match for Wimbledon house prices



Most of us have more chance of winning a set – well maybe a game – against Andy Murray, than buying a property near the All England Lawn Tennis Club

Wimbledon starts in less than a week’s time, and thousands of excitable tennis fans will descend on the All England Lawn Tennis Club in South West London for two weeks, to watch their favourite players fight for the honour of being crowned Wimbledon champion.

To get into the spirit of Wimbledon, online estate agents HouseSimple.com has carried out some research looking at the average price of property near to the All England Club, and compared to average prices near to the Australian, US and French Open venues.

The figures reveal that average house prices in Wimbledon Village, SW19, which is a short walk from the courts are far and way the highest of all four tournament venues. At more than £1.5m, you’d actually have to win the Wimbledon Championships to be able to afford to buy a property close by.

Average property prices in Wimbledon Village currently standing at £1,591,939, compared to £604,932 near Melbourne Park, the Australian Open venue,  £466,193 close to the site of the US Open, in Flushing Meadows, and just £459,957 near Roland Garros, in the 16th arrondissement of Paris.

With this year’s men’s and women’s Wimbledon champions each picking up a cheque for a cool £2m, they wouldn’t get much change if they bought in Wimbledon Village, although average property prices across the whole of SW19, are a little more reasonable at £874,857.

But if you think average property prices are eye-watering near to the All England Lawn Tennis Club, HouseSimple also looked into property prices close to some of the few tennis clubs in the UK that have quality grass courts, and you could pay a premium of as much as 282% to live just an overhead smash away.

The average price of property near to the Holland Park Lawn Tennis Club is just over £4.34 million; that’s 281.5% more than the average of £1,138,333 for that postcode area. Slightly more affordable, are property prices near to the Halton Tennis Centre, close to Aylesbury, in Buckinghamshire. At an average of £642,917, they are 54.6% higher than the £415,783 for the postcode area.

The following table reveals average property prices and the price premium you could pay to live near to one of the UK’s lawn tennis clubs.











Region

Name of tennis club

Average property price in postcode area (£)

Average property price next to tennis club (£)

Price premium


 (%)

London

Holland Park Lawn Tennis Club

£1,138,333

£4,343,167

281.5%

London

The Hurlingham Club

£1,110,978

£2,694,139

142.5%

South East

St George’s Hill Lawn Tennis Club

£752,076

£1,255,083

66.9%

London

Queen’s Club

£1,138,333

£1,140,167

0.2%

South East

Stoke Park Country Club

£346,099

£825,000

138.4%

London

Roehampton Club

£719,965

£732,199

1.7%

South East

Pit Farm Tennis Club

£515,186

£701,944

36.3%

South East

Halton Tennis Centre

£415,783

£642,917

54.6%

East Midlands

The Leicestershire Tennis and Squash Club

£201,336

£305,142

51.6%

Alex Gosling, CEO of online estate agents HouseSimple.com comments: “Most of us have more chance of winning a set – well maybe a game – against Andy Murray, than buying a property near the All England Lawn Tennis Club. However, property prices close to the Wimbledon Championships pale in comparison to average prices next to the Holland Park Lawn Tennis Club. Even if you combined the men’s and women’s winners cheques, they still wouldn’t cover the average price of a property in the area.”

Image: Yuri Turkov via Shutterstock



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Issue 324 : Jan 2025