The biggest surprise in this June 2026 snapshot? A 3-room apartment in Newcastle upon Tyne comes in at just €230,784 — and that’s not far off Plymouth at €240,892 and Glasgow at €257,737. For buyers comparing family-sized homes across Great Britain, that’s a pretty wide entry-price range for the same apartment type.
What makes the spread even more striking is how quickly prices climb in other cities. Sheffield stays under €300,000 at €294,799, Cardiff is close behind at €298,167, but Leeds jumps all the way to €419,456. That means the gap between the cheapest and priciest city in this sample is nearly €190,000.
The data also shows that lower asking prices don’t always line up with the best rental performance. Newcastle pairs its low price with a 9.74% gross yield, while Glasgow sits at 9.66% and Birmingham at 8.43%. So if you’re looking at 3-room apartments as either a home or an investment, the city choice matters a lot more than the floor plan alone.
Read the full analysis with interactive charts and district-level data on Realty Pulse
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