Cheaper twin · England
£978,570 less for an equivalent flat: same station, similar schools, ~1.62km apart
See both areas on the live map →| Mayfair (W1K 2) | SW1X 0 | |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated £/m² | £34,362 | £23,489 |
| On a 90 m² home | £3,092,580 | £2,114,010 |
| Dominant property type | Flats/Maisonettes | Flats/Maisonettes |
| Typical build era | ~1914 | ~1914 |
| Good+ secondary catchments | 2.0 | 2.0 |
| Nearest station | ~0.5 km | ~0.5 km |
| Sales in sample (N) | 591 | 1,606 |
Mayfair (W1K 2) and SW1X 0 sit about 1.62 km apart, share the same dominant housing (flats/maisonettes, typically built around 1914), comparable good-school catchments and the same level of station access. Yet an equivalent home works out roughly 32% (about £978,570 on a 90 m² property) cheaper in SW1X 0. On the measures that move price they are near-identical; the gap is mostly the premium attached to the better-known name.
Postcode sectors (e.g. N10 3) compared on estimated £/m² of floor space. A pair is only called a 'twin' when the two sectors share the dominant property type, build era (±30y), good-school catchment provision, station access, deprivation/tenure, education, age and home size, so the price gap reflects a name premium, not a different kind of area. Estimates, not valuations; aggregated to sector, never address-level.
Contains HM Land Registry data © Crown copyright and database right. Licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Figures are estimates derived from recorded sales and EPC floor areas, aggregated to postcode sector, not valuations, and not address-level.