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West London News (WLN) > Local West London News > Richmond upon Thames News > Richmond News > The salary needed to buy a home in every London borough in 2026
Richmond NewsLocal West London News

The salary needed to buy a home in every London borough in 2026

News Desk
Last updated: January 10, 2026 9:37 am
News Desk
2 months ago
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The salary needed to buy a home in every London borough in 2026
Credit: Google Maps/Eugen Tamas's Images

Key Points

  • New analysis estimates the gross annual salary required to buy an average-priced home in each London borough in 2026.
  • Inner London boroughs such as Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster and Camden demand the highest incomes, far above typical London wages.
  • Outer boroughs including Barking and Dagenham, Bexley and Havering remain comparatively more accessible for first-time buyers.

London (West London News) January 10, 2026 – A new set of housing market estimates for 2026 suggests that the salary needed to purchase an average home varies dramatically between London boroughs, underlining how large parts of the capital remain out of reach for buyers on typical incomes. Drawing on current house price data, mortgage market conditions and recent affordability assessments, the projections highlight a widening gulf between the city’s most and least expensive neighbourhoods.

Contents
  • Key Points
  • How do 2026 salary requirements differ across London boroughs?
  • Which London boroughs are projected to be least and most affordable?
    • Why does the ‘impossibly unaffordable’ label matter for 2026 buyers?
  • How do 2026 market forecasts affect what buyers must earn?
  • What are the implications for Londoners hoping to buy in 2026?

According to reporting by Time Out and recent affordability studies, buyers aiming for a standard 25-year repayment mortgage with a typical deposit face income requirements that in central areas can exceed several times the median London salary, while some outer boroughs still offer entry points closer to national earnings levels. The figures arrive as forecasters expect only modest UK price growth in 2026, but warn that London will remain one of the country’s most pressured markets.

How do 2026 salary requirements differ across London boroughs?

Time Out’s coverage of London housing has repeatedly pointed to the capital’s extreme price-to-income ratios, citing a think tank study that classed the city as “impossibly unaffordable” based on a median house price at least nine times the median household income. In line with that assessment, borough-level projections for 2026 show that purchasing an average home in prime central areas such as Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster and Camden is likely to require very high six-figure salaries, assuming standard lending multiples and mainstream mortgage rates.

As reported by Time Out London of Time Out, the Demographia International Housing Affordability report found that London was the only UK region placed in the most severe category of unaffordability, with typical homes costing up to nine times median earnings. Building on this framework, borough estimates for 2026 suggest that income thresholds track closely with local price levels: the higher the prevailing price, the steeper the salary hurdle for would-be buyers.

Which London boroughs are projected to be least and most affordable?

Coverage of the Demographia findings by Time Out noted that London as a whole compares with global hotspots such as Hong Kong, Sydney and Vancouver on affordability measures, but that conditions vary within the capital. Outer boroughs with lower average prices, including Barking and Dagenham, Bexley and Havering, tend to show the lowest estimated salary requirements for 2026, bringing them closer to the earnings of key workers and younger professionals. These locations often sit nearer the affordability range seen in cheaper UK regions such as parts of the North East and Midlands.

By contrast, inner London boroughs with premium postcodes continue to dominate the upper end of the scale. Areas such as Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster, Camden and parts of fulham/hammersmith/">hammersmith-and-fulham/">Hammersmith and Fulham, where average prices are several times the UK norm, generate salary requirements that far exceed typical London incomes even when assuming modest house price growth. Analysts quoted by national outlets have stressed that, in these boroughs, buyers often rely on substantial equity, inherited wealth or higher-than-average professional salaries rather than standard first-time-buyer finances.

Why does the ‘impossibly unaffordable’ label matter for 2026 buyers?

The Demographia methodology, highlighted in Time Out’s reporting, uses a “median multiple” of house prices to incomes to classify markets. London’s rating of nine or above places it among the least affordable in the world and provides the backdrop for 2026 salary estimates. Even if forecasters expect only modest nationwide price growth in 2026, the existing gap between prices and wages in London means that salary thresholds for buying are unlikely to fall significantly without a marked change in either prices or lending criteria.

How do 2026 market forecasts affect what buyers must earn?

Recent national reporting on the 2026 housing outlook suggests that UK house prices are expected to rise only slowly, with mainstream forecasts pointing to annual growth of roughly 2 to 4 per cent. According to coverage of comments from senior analysts at major lenders and property firms, this would mark a steadier phase after recent volatility, but would not in itself restore affordability in high-cost areas. Experts cited in these reports have also highlighted that London and the South are likely to see more subdued price growth than some northern regions, because prices in the capital are already stretched relative to incomes.

Reporting by housing market commentators has noted that falling mortgage rates and slightly improving credit conditions could ease monthly repayment pressures for some buyers in 2026. However, because lenders typically cap borrowing at a multiple of gross salary, the income required to secure a given loan size still closely follows local price levels. This means that even if interest rates drift lower, the salary needed to purchase an average home in many London boroughs will remain beyond the reach of households on median incomes unless prices stagnate or fall in real terms.

For households targeting more affordable boroughs, these same dynamics may work in their favour. Where starting prices are lower, a combination of modest price growth, slightly cheaper mortgage deals and stable employment incomes can make salary thresholds for buying more achievable, particularly for dual-income households. Some analysts quoted in national coverage argue that this could support ongoing demand in outer London and commuter-belt areas during 2026.

What are the implications for Londoners hoping to buy in 2026?

The emerging estimates of required salaries by borough underline a deepening divide in London’s housing landscape. For many residents, especially first-time buyers without access to family wealth, the figures imply that ownership in central boroughs will remain distant, pushing them either towards outer boroughs, shared-ownership schemes, or continued renting. This pattern reinforces a long-running trend in which more affordable neighbourhoods see stronger relative demand from younger households priced out of the inner city.

At the same time, experts quoted in recent reporting suggest that the top end of the London market is likely to stay price-sensitive, creating opportunities for well-capitalised buyers able to meet high salary tests or deploy substantial deposits. For policymakers, the borough-level salary estimates add weight to calls for increased housing supply, including affordable and intermediate tenures, in order to close the gap between local earnings and the cost of buying. For now, the 2026 outlook indicates that while the broader UK market may be entering a steadier phase, London’s affordability challenge – and the steep salaries required to buy across many of its boroughs – will remain a defining feature of the capital’s housing story.

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