When a homeowner starts thinking about selling, one of the first things they do is look at what properties nearby have sold for - it's a sensible starting point. HM Land Registry publishes a record of every residential property sale registered in England and Wales, including the address, sale price, date of transaction, and property type. The data is free to access, updated monthly, and more comprehensive than almost any other public source of property information in the country.
Used correctly, it is a genuinely powerful tool for understanding your local market. Used carelessly, it can mislead sellers into pricing decisions that cost them time and money. The difference lies in knowing what the data does and does not tell you.
What the data contains
Land Registry records the price at which a property legally changed hands, based on the figure submitted to HMRC for Stamp Duty Land Tax purposes. It captures the agreed sale price at the point of completion, not the asking price, not an estimate, and not an average. Every entry represents a real transaction that took place between a willing buyer and a willing seller.
The dataset covers all residential transactions, including freehold and leasehold properties, new builds and existing homes, and sales at all price points. It also records whether a property is newly built or an established resale, which matters when drawing comparisons. New build prices often include developer incentives, upgraded specifications, or contributions to buying costs that are not always reflected in the headline figure, which can distort comparisons with the second-hand market.
Why recency matters more than proximity
The most common mistake sellers make when consulting Land Registry data is reaching too far back in time. A sale from eighteen months ago in the same street tells you something, but it does not tell you what your home would sell for today. The market in many areas has moved considerably since then, and in some areas, it has moved in both directions at different points.
The most relevant comparable sales are those completed within the past three to four months, in your immediate area, for properties of a similar type, size, tenure, and condition. Land Registry data is published with a lag of roughly two to three months from the date of completion, which means the most recent entries are typically from earlier in the year. That lag matters in a market that is shifting. The data tells you where prices have been rather than exactly where they are right now.
For the most current picture of sold prices, combining Land Registry data with the agreed sales data that estate agents can access provides a more complete view. Properties that have recently gone under offer but not yet completed will appear in agent databases but not in Land Registry records for several months. In active markets, that gap is significant.
What sold prices cannot tell you
A sold price reveals the transaction figure. It does not reveal the condition the property was in when it sold, whether the sale followed a bidding war or a prolonged negotiation, whether there were any unusual circumstances that affected the price, or what improvements have been made since. Two identical houses on the same street can sell for meaningfully different amounts depending on how they were presented, how they were marketed, and who bought them.
This is the limitation of using sold prices as a direct like-for-like benchmark without additional context. A property that sold for a specific figure two years ago, after an expensive kitchen extension, is not a reliable comparator for a home of the same type that has not been updated since the 1990s. Price-per-square-foot analysis, which some portals now provide alongside Land Registry data, helps account for size differences but still cannot fully adjust for condition or specification.
How to use the data well
The most effective way to use Land Registry data as a seller is as a starting point for a conversation with your agent rather than as a definitive answer. Bring the comparable sales you have identified to your valuation appointment. Ask your estate agent to explain how each one relates to your property, accounting for differences in size, condition, presentation, and the market conditions at the time of sale.
An estate agent with active local knowledge will be able to tell you which comparables are genuinely relevant, which sold quickly and at asking price, and which sat on the market and were reduced before eventually completing. That context is the difference between a useful data point and a misleading one. Land Registry data is the foundation. Local expertise is what turns it into an accurate, defensible valuation.
The sellers who get the best outcomes are rarely those who rely exclusively on either raw data or an estate agent's word alone. They are the ones who bring both to the same table.
Book a valuation with our team today