英国论坛
签证版主@johhn 大推荐了一篇telegraph上的文章讲了房价和学校的关系,不错的文章,和大家分享一下。这篇文章分析了房价和学校的关系还有全英格兰好坏学校的地图。
Daily Telegraph上的这篇文章是根据Savills(一个卖高档房的中介)的研究写的, 他们说不考试入学的好中学旁边的房价比周围地区房价高28%。 “Prices in the postcode sector of the best-performing, non-selective state schools are on average 28pc higher than for the region in which they sit. This gives credibility to the school premium that those living in relevant school catchment areas so often refer to”.
Financial Time上根据Loyds bank研究也有类似的文章,它的结论是英格兰的最好公立学校把房价推高了。”Top English state schools push up house prices: Parents in England are paying a premium of up to £500,000 to live near the best performing state secondary schools, according to a survey.“
Evening Standard上也有一篇文章“245%: That’s the postcode premium for living in catchment area of top London school”
房价和学校好坏有很强的相关关系,但那个是因那个是果就很难说了(鸡和蛋的问题),有人说学校好所以房价高,但也有觉得房价高说明区好,区好孩子行为好家长重视教育,学生好学校也就好。
Mapped: Where England’s best schools are pushing up house prices
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/property/house-prices/11482241/Mapped-Where-Englands-best-schools-are-pushing-up-house-prices.html
Many parents are willing to invest thousands of pounds in school fees, hoping to offer their children the best start in life. Even for those who don’t opt to send their children to private school, a good education can come at a cost.
This map illustrates where house prices have been bumped up by good local schools.
Each dot represents a school in England. The larger the dot, the greater the relative cost of homes around the school compared to the rest of the region. This premium indicates where good school could be driving up nearby house prices.
The colour of each dot represents how well pupils perform in exams. The darker the shade, the better the grades. Use the “visible layers” toggle to switch between views of schools by GCSE and A-level performance.
The data, compiled by Savills in its report The Education Equation, show that for many the “most cost efficient option is to tap into high performing state schools, without school fees to worry about”.
Lucian Cook, director of residential research at Savills, said: “Prices in the postcode sector of the best-performing, non-selective state schools are on average 28pc higher than for the region in which they sit." He added that this gives “credibility to the school premium that those living in relevant school catchment areas so often refer to”.
avills identified areas such as Dorking, Malvern, Borehamwood, Warwick, Oxford and Guildford where strong state-funded schools have resulted in higher house prices. In Northwood, Brighton, Shrewsbury and Ascot housing costs have been given a boost by a number of strong private schools.
In London, 30pc of pupils do not get their first choice of state secondary school. House prices around London’s top independent schools can also be high as parents try and reduce the length of the school run.
The average house price in the postcode sectors in which London’s private schools are found is just shy of £760,000, Savills calculated, compared with around £460,000 for the capital as a whole. House prices in Wallington, Altrincham, and Orpington are boosted by good local grammar schools, Savills said.
Top English state schools push up house prices
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/b0d6d47c-2c51-11e4-8eda-00144feabdc0.html#axzz3VEkxM45b
Parents in England are paying a premium of up to £500,000 to live near the best performing state secondary schools, according to a survey.
Houses prices near Beaconsfield High School in Buckinghamshire – ranked in the top five state schools in England – are 154 per cent, or £483,031, higher than in neighbouring areas, the report by Lloyds Bank found.
Parents wanting to live close to one of the top 30 state schools in England are paying an average premium of £21,000, or 10 per cent, for their home according to the report published on Tuesday.
“There’s strong competition for properties in areas where state schools are providing top quality education, often in locations with limited supply, which is supporting prices,” said Lloyds.
“Although property values can be significantly lower in neighbouring areas, many parents don’t appear to be put off from paying a premium to ensure their child has the best possible chance to attend their chosen school.
“Those on average earnings are finding it difficult to purchase a property close to many of the best state schools.”
Homes near leading schools in the southeast commanded the biggest premiums, with house prices about 27 per cent, or £72,000, above the average for the country.
245%: That’s the postcode premium for living in catchment area of top London school
http://www.standard.co.uk/lifestyle/london-life/245-thats-the-postcode-premium-for-living-in-catchment-area-of-top-london-school-8953893.html
Catchment areas for London’s top primary and secondary state schools are a big battleground, with parents resorting to paying over the odds just to live in the right zone, says Lucy Tobin
Despite the premium, it can still be cheaper for parents who are desperate to get their kids into a top school to invest in a house in the right catchment area than pay years of private fees. The average London family will have to pay a premium of £173,000 to live in the catchment of the capital’s best state schools — compared with 14 years of London private school fees costing some £195,300. That’s for parents with just the one child, when any Chelsea tractor-driving parent knows that it’s de rigueur to have at least three.
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But agents report some parents are so desperate to secure the keys to a home in the right street while avoiding the more aggressive council catchment fraud investigators that they are taking over the house search themselves. They pore over school catchment maps, then doorstep whole roads to ask owners “is your property for sale?” in order to guarantee first refusal on key homes. Others do less legwork — posting messages on local area Facebook pages requesting buyers in their desired postcodes but making it clear that they are prepared to pay for the privilege of a catchment-area house.
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“More people are now renting out their own homes and temporarily renting on Brookland’s doorstep,” says Fine. “And still others are hovering around the catchment looking to purchase rather than stump up for years of private fees. Both factors are pushing up values and meaning the catchment area has got a lot smaller. We’ve seen some families go through the upheaval of moving into the “right” street, only to find the catchment has shrunk. One year people just one street away from Brookland couldn’t get in. People who’d moved there especially got absolutely stuffed.”
Still, the catchment-property-buying parents have plenty to be philosophical about. House prices may falter or fall but homes near schools will always enjoy greater demand. As Nicholas Ayre, managing director of agency Home Fusion, puts it: “Properties near good state schools are insulated against the harsher turns in the property market — you can take comfort from the fact that there will always be new families looking to pay a premium.”
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好好学习一下
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mark 学习
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还有金币可拿
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看半天就2 银子
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Houses prices near Beaconsfield High School in Buckinghamshire – ranked in the top five state schools in England – are 154 per cent, or £483,031, higher than in neighbouring areas, the report by Lloyds Bank found.
这就扯了,Beaconsfield High又不是不要考,学区划得很大的,11+考过121分,家又在学区里,基本就是这学校的了
至于房价为什么差那么多?那是因为Beaconsfield本身就比周围的区域要posh很多
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多出5W, 这钱卖房子的时候就回来了, 还有增值
私立的学费付了就是没了
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学习了!!
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谢谢楼主啦
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国内叫学区房,这里不知道有什么专门的英文名词啊;P
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好好学习:handshake
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mark一下,稍候学习
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哪里都有好学校,中国那么差也有好学校啊
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公立的难上,私立的贵!