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Comparing 4 cities

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4 of 4 selected

Metric

Newcastle

The North East's capital, re-emerging.

London

Global capital. Global demand. Long-term capital.

Nottingham

Student capital. Commuter-belt upside.

Birmingham

Second city. First-rate growth fundamentals.

Gross yield range6.5–9%3.5–5.5%6–9%5–6.8%
Entry price£110,000–£225,000£320,000–£1,250,000£125,000–£250,000£180,000–£410,000
Population forecast310,000 by 20309.6m by 2030345,000 by 20301.2m by 2030
Price growth forecast+16.8% (2024-29)+13.9% (2024-29)+17.2% (2024-29)+19.9% (2024-29)
Rental growth forecast+17.9% (2024-28)+15.1% (2024-28)+16.4% (2024-28)+18.4% (2024-28)
New homes pipeline4,500 new homes (5-yr)37,000 pa (vs 340k need)3,800 new homes (5-yr)17,000 (Smithfield alone)
Universities2 universities40+ universities2 universities5 universities
Student population50,000 students420,000+ students65,000 students80,000+ students
City-centre businesses
Median age34 years (lowest in North East)35 years (lowest in England); inner-east boroughs 30–3231 years (second-youngest LA in UK)33.7 years (ONS 2024)
Private renters23% private rented / rent-free citywide30% London-wide; 40%+ in Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Newham~30% citywide PRS; NG1 materially higher22.6% citywide; 29.4% in B1
Graduate retention40% Northumbria graduates; 26% Newcastle Uni77% (highest in UK, Centre for Cities)University of Nottingham #1 UK for graduate employment (HESA 2024)41% (Savills 2024)
Household income£43,200 avg salary citywide£79,555 GDHI per head Westminster + City (ONS 2023)£40,400 avg salary citywide£28,648 avg salary B1
Target tenantYoung professionals and postgraduates working across NHS, public sector, tech and professional services at Quayside and Pilgrim Street, plus international students at Newcastle and Northumbria universities driving premium city-centre apartment demand.City and Canary Wharf finance and tech professionals, global graduates on 3–5 year stints, international students. East End regeneration zones pick up priced-out millennials and key workers.Students and recent graduates from University of Nottingham and Nottingham Trent (~70k combined), plus young professionals at Boots, Experian, Capital One and Games Workshop renting in Lace Market, Island Quarter and Waterside.Young professionals 25–34 in legal, financial, HS2 and professional services. Five universities add a strong graduate pipeline. Asian professional demographic particularly prominent in Colmore Row and Brindleyplace postcodes.
Top regen projectForth Yards / Quayside West · £330m initial tender (£121.8m gov funding)Old Kent Road Opportunity Area · £10bn+Broad Marsh · £2bn programmeParadise Birmingham · £1.2bn
Regen pipeline4 major schemes4 major schemes4 major schemes4 major schemes
Key neighbourhoodsQuayside · Ouseburn Valley · Heaton & Jesmond · Pilgrim StreetCanary Wharf & Docklands · Stratford & Olympic Park · Elephant & Castle · Woolwich & Abbey WoodLace Market · The Park · Lenton & Dunkirk · Island QuarterDigbeth · Jewellery Quarter · Snow Hill & Colmore Business District · Broad Street & Westside
Transport highlightNewcastle Central, 2h 47m to London6 international airportsNottingham Station, 1h 40m to LondonNew Street & Moor Street, 1h 22m to London
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