£150,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Ilford Road, FY4 4EB
£150,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Ilford Road, FY4 4EB
Duncan Raistrick
-2d ago
Compare local agents for a Blackpool home, using sold-price evidence from 2,500 recent sales








Blackpool has a distinct housing market shaped by its coastal setting, Victorian resort growth and a large stock of terraced homes around FY1, FY2 and FY4. Our sold-price data shows an average sale price of £165,000, with around 2,500 completed sales in the last 12 months. Prices have risen by 2.5% over the year, which makes accurate pricing important rather than just optimistic. A good local agent should understand why a terraced house near Foxhall Road behaves differently from a detached home around Cottam Hall. That detail can protect your asking price and reduce wasted time.
Blackpool’s market is not led by one property type. Terraced homes form the largest share of the housing stock, and they average £130,000, while semi-detached homes average £185,000. Detached homes sit much higher at £280,000, with flats averaging £95,000. Those gaps matter because an agent valuing a converted flat near the Promenade needs a different pricing argument from an agent valuing a 4 bedroom home at Cottam Hall Gardens. Homedata.co.uk sold-price records show that each sector has moved at a different pace, so the best choice is an agent who can explain the evidence street by street.

£165,000
Average Sold Price
2,500
Sales in Last 12 Months
+2.5%
12-Month Price Change
£280,000
Detached Average
£185,000
Semi-Detached Average
£130,000
Terraced Average
£95,000
Flat Average
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Blackpool’s average sold price is £165,000, which places many local moves below the level seen in larger North West cities. Homedata.co.uk records show around 2,500 sales over the last 12 months, giving agents a broad recent evidence base. The overall annual rise is 2.5%, not a runaway increase, so buyers still test asking prices hard. A terraced property in the older FY1 streets needs a sharper launch price than a newer 4 bedroom home at Cottam Hall Gardens in FY4. Small pricing errors can show quickly.
Detached homes average £280,000 and have seen a 3.0% annual rise, the strongest movement by property type in Blackpool. That segment includes larger post-war and modern homes, plus higher priced new-build houses at Cottam Hall Gardens, where 3, 4 and 5 bedroom detached and semi-detached homes have been marketed from around £240,000 to £400,000. Agents valuing these homes need to separate modern specification from plot size and street position. A broad townwide average will not do that. The strongest agents will show you which recent detached sales support the figure.
Semi-detached homes average £185,000, with prices up 2.0% over 12 months. Much of this stock comes from the 1919-1945 and post-war periods, often with bay windows, tiled roofs and cavity brick walls. That matters for valuation because condition and extensions can move the price more than the headline average. A well-presented semi-detached house with a sound roof and modern heating will sit in a different bracket from one needing damp or timber repairs. In Blackpool, condition is a pricing factor, not an afterthought.
Terraced homes average £130,000 and have risen by 2.8% over the last year. They account for around 40-45% of the local housing stock, so there is usually a wide evidence base for this type. Many were built before 1919, particularly in areas shaped by the town’s expansion as a seaside resort. Solid brick walls, slate roofs and shallow brick footings are common features in older terraces. An agent who understands these details can explain price differences between two homes that may look similar online.
Based on 1,226 live listings with an average asking price of £166,603.
Source: home.co.uk
See which agents are selling fastest and at the best prices in Blackpool.
Compare Estate Agents FreeAround 2,500 homes sold in Blackpool over the last 12 months, which gives sellers a useful read on buyer behaviour. The largest share of homes is terraced, at around 40-45% of the housing stock, followed by semi-detached homes at around 30-35%. Flats and apartments account for around 15-20%, while detached homes make up around 5-10%. That mix is central to agent choice because an agent used to selling terraces near the Town Centre and Promenade may not be the strongest fit for a higher value detached house in FY4. Ask for evidence that matches your property type.
New-build activity is adding another layer to the market. Foxhall Village on Foxhall Road, FY1 5AL, by Great Places Housing Group, includes 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes with a mixture of houses and apartments, with prices from around £140,000 to £250,000. The Gateway on Bispham Road, FY2 0NR, by Lovell Partnerships, brings 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes into the northern part of Blackpool. Cottam Hall Gardens at Cottam Hall, FY4 5PL, by Rowland Homes, sits higher in the market with 3, 4 and 5 bedroom detached and semi-detached homes. Resale homes near these schemes need agents who can position older space, plot size and location against new-build finish.
Flats average £95,000 and have risen by 1.5% over the year, which is slower than houses. Some flats are purpose-built, while others are converted from larger Victorian and Edwardian buildings close to the Promenade, Town Centre and holiday areas. Conversion quality matters, especially around fire separation, sound insulation and shared repairs. A good agent should explain lease length, service charges and condition in plain English before the property goes live. Those points can affect viewings before price becomes the main issue.

Blackpool has a population of around 141,000 and roughly 65,000 households, so the market has both owner-occupier and investor activity. Tourism and hospitality remain major employers, with Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Blackpool Tower and the Winter Gardens influencing seasonal work patterns. Public sector employment also matters, including Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Blackpool Council. Those employment bases affect how buyers judge commute, income stability and rental potential. A local agent should know which buyer pool is most likely for your street.
The town’s housing stock reflects several construction periods. Pre-1919 terraces and larger Victorian homes are common, particularly around the older resort core and the Town Centre and Promenade conservation area. Inter-war semi-detached houses from 1919-1945 appear across many residential streets, often with cavity brick walls and tiled roofs. Post-war estates brought more semi-detached and some detached homes, while post-1980 construction includes houses and apartments in locations such as Cottam Hall Gardens. Different eras need different marketing language.
Conservation areas create extra context for valuation. Blackpool’s Town Centre and Promenade, Raikes Hall and Stanley Park conservation areas include concentrations of listed buildings and historic structures. Blackpool Tower, the Winter Gardens and the Grand Theatre are part of that built setting, and nearby homes can carry maintenance or planning considerations. Buyers may ask more questions about roofs, windows and external repairs in these areas. Agents should be ready with clear answers rather than vague reassurances.
Transport patterns also shape buyer interest. Blackpool North, Blackpool South and Blackpool Pleasure Beach stations connect different parts of the town with Preston and wider Lancashire routes. The tramway along the seafront affects how buyers view homes near the Promenade and Bispham Road. Road access via the M55 is a factor for owners travelling towards Preston or the wider Fylde coast. These details are not decoration in a listing, they influence who books a viewing.
Terraced houses are the backbone of the Blackpool market. With around 40-45% of the housing stock in this category, sold-price evidence is usually stronger for terraces than for rare detached homes. The average terraced sale price is £130,000, with 2.8% annual growth. Older examples may have solid brick walls, slate roofs and timber floors, so condition needs close attention. An agent should not price every terrace by bedroom count alone.
Semi-detached homes, at around 30-35% of local stock, average £185,000. Many sit in inter-war and post-war streets, where bay windows, cavity walls and concrete tiled roofs are common. Extensions can improve saleability, but differential settlement between an extension and the original structure can affect survey results. Buyers may ask for evidence of building control sign-off, especially where layouts have changed. A strong agent will prepare that paperwork before marketing starts.
Detached homes make up only around 5-10% of Blackpool’s housing stock, so the evidence base is narrower. The average detached price is £280,000, and the 3.0% annual rise suggests this sector has performed better than flats and semi-detached homes. Cottam Hall Gardens in FY4 adds newer detached and semi-detached homes to that part of the market. Pricing a detached home needs careful comparison of garden size, garage provision and build age. A generic valuation can miss those differences.
Flats account for around 15-20% of homes and average £95,000. Blackpool has both apartments within modern schemes and converted flats in older buildings, especially near the resort core. Lease details, maintenance history and communal condition can change buyer confidence. The 1.5% annual rise is the lowest by property type, so asking prices need discipline. Agents should back up valuation advice with comparable completed flat sales, not only current listings.
Blackpool’s geology is mainly glacial till, also known as boulder clay, over Triassic Sherwood Sandstone Group formations. Clay soils can carry a moderate to high shrink-swell risk in certain areas, especially after long dry or wet periods. That matters for sellers because cracking, sticking doors or historic movement can become survey points. Mature trees close to older shallow foundations may increase buyer caution. A prepared seller can deal with these questions before negotiation.
Flood risk in Blackpool comes from more than one direction. Coastal areas face tidal flooding and storm surge risk from the Irish Sea, while surface water flooding can affect urban streets during heavy rainfall. The River Wyre and its tributaries influence the wider Fylde area, even though the river is not directly within the town boundary. Homes close to the Promenade may face different questions from homes further inland in FY4. Good agents know how to explain risk without alarming serious buyers.
Coastal weather leaves marks on buildings. Salt-laden air can corrode metal fixings, window frames and external components, while wind exposure can damage roofs, chimneys and render. Dampness is common in older Blackpool properties, including rising damp, penetrating damp and condensation. Terraced houses can also show lateral movement to front or rear walls, lintel defects and damp through solid walls. These are not reasons to avoid selling, but they should influence preparation.
Building materials vary by age. Red brick is common across terraced and semi-detached homes, while render and pebble-dash appear on many older refurbished properties. Victorian and Edwardian homes often have solid walls and slate roofs, while modern homes use cavity wall construction, insulation and uPVC double glazing. Buyers will judge each era differently. The right agent should help you decide whether to commission repair quotes, a survey or an EPC before launch.
Estate agent choice in Blackpool should start with evidence, not slogans. High-street agents often suit homes where local viewing feedback and negotiation matter, such as older terraces near the Town Centre and Promenade or larger homes close to Stanley Park. Online agents may suit sellers who are comfortable handling more of the process and want a fixed fee. Hybrid services sit between those models. The best option depends on your property type and how much help you need during viewings, offers and sales progression.
Fees in England usually sit between 1-3% + VAT, with many sole agency agreements around 1.5% + VAT. Online fixed-fee packages often range from £999-£1,999, with some payable upfront. Sole agency contracts often last 8-16 weeks, while multi-agency can cost more. In a town where flats average £95,000 and detached homes average £280,000, the fee structure has a different cash impact depending on your sale price. Always work out the fee in pounds before signing.
Contract terms matter as much as the headline fee. Look for sole selling rights clauses, withdrawal costs, marketing extras and tie-in length. A seller with a terraced home near Foxhall Village may need quick momentum from a realistic price, while a detached home near Cottam Hall may need a longer campaign with higher quality photography. Ask how viewings are handled and who negotiates offers. Those practical points often affect the final result more than a small fee difference.

Ask at least 2-3 agents to value your Blackpool home before you choose. Compare how each agent uses recent sold prices for your property type, whether that is a £130,000 terraced benchmark or a £280,000 detached benchmark.
Request examples of comparable sales in FY1, FY2 or FY4 that match your home’s age, condition and layout. A converted flat near the Promenade should not be valued using only semi-detached evidence from a different part of town.
Ask each agent to explain the asking price, the likely buyer pool and the price they think will secure viewings in the first 2 weeks. Blackpool’s overall annual rise is 2.5%, so a high valuation should have strong support.
Convert every fee into a cash figure using your likely sale price. On a £165,000 sale, a 1.5% + VAT fee is very different from an upfront fixed fee of £999-£1,999.
Read the tie-in period, sole agency wording and withdrawal terms before you sign. Sole agency commonly runs for 8-16 weeks, and multi-agency usually costs more.
Confirm photography, floorplans, viewing arrangements and how the agent will describe local details such as Stanley Park, Bispham Road or Foxhall Road. A stronger launch gives your property the best chance of early interest.
Treat a very high valuation with caution unless the agent can support it with recent Blackpool sold prices. A £130,000 terraced average, £185,000 semi-detached average and £280,000 detached average leave plenty of room for variation, but the evidence should match your street, build age and condition.
The first 2-3 weeks of marketing are critical in Blackpool because buyers quickly compare similar homes across FY1, FY2 and FY4. A terraced house priced too far above the £130,000 average may lose early viewings unless condition, size or location clearly justify it. Detached homes have more headroom, with an average of £280,000 and stronger annual growth at 3.0%. Even then, presentation still matters. Buyers notice roof condition, damp staining and dated layouts.
Bedroom count is only part of the story. Foxhall Village includes 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes, while Cottam Hall Gardens includes 3, 4 and 5 bedroom properties at higher price points. Older Blackpool homes can offer generous room sizes, but they may also carry higher maintenance expectations. An agent should know when to lead with space, when to lead with location and when to be direct about works needed. Honest marketing often produces better qualified viewings.
Sales progression can be just as important as finding a buyer. Survey issues are common in coastal and older housing, including damp, slipped roof tiles, timber decay and salt corrosion. If your buyer’s survey raises concerns, the agent’s job is to keep the deal alive with evidence, quotes and calm negotiation. That is where local building knowledge can protect your net sale price. A lower fee is not useful if the sale falls through.

New-build schemes influence how older homes are marketed in Blackpool. Foxhall Village on Foxhall Road, FY1 5AL, has brought 2, 3 and 4 bedroom houses and apartments into the market, with stated prices from around £140,000 to £250,000. Resale terraces nearby need to compete on space, location or price rather than new fittings. A seller should know exactly how their home compares before choosing an asking price. This is where agent preparation shows.
The Gateway on Bispham Road, FY2 0NR, by Lovell Partnerships, adds 2, 3 and 4 bedroom homes in the northern part of Blackpool. New homes can create a clear benchmark for buyers who want modern layouts and lower immediate maintenance. Older semi-detached homes nearby may still win on garden size, parking or room proportions. The agent’s role is to frame those advantages in a way buyers understand. Bland descriptions will not separate your home from new stock.
Cottam Hall Gardens at Cottam Hall, FY4 5PL, by Rowland Homes, sits in a higher price band with 3, 4 and 5 bedroom detached and semi-detached homes from around £240,000 to £400,000. That matters for sellers of modern family houses in FY4 because buyers may compare resale homes against new-build incentives. A resale home can still compete if it has landscaping, fitted flooring, established storage and no chain. Pricing should reflect those points, not ignore them.
Agent selection should take new-build awareness into account. A local agent needs to explain how a red brick inter-war semi-detached house differs from a new cavity wall home with current insulation standards. They should also know how mortgage surveyors may view older roofs, damp proofing and extension work. Blackpool’s mix of pre-1919, 1919-1945, post-war and post-1980 homes makes that judgement important. One pricing method will not fit every sale.
1,226 properties currently listed across Blackpool. Here are the most recently added.
£150,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Ilford Road, FY4 4EB
£150,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Ilford Road, FY4 4EB
Duncan Raistrick
-2d ago
£95,000
Terraced, 2 bed
Grafton Street, FY1 3RE
£95,000
Terraced, 2 bed
Grafton Street, FY1 3RE
Yopa
-3d ago
£450,000
Detached Bungalow, 4 bed
North Park Drive, FY3 8NH
£450,000
Detached Bungalow, 4 bed
North Park Drive, FY3 8NH
Duncan Raistrick
-3d ago
£120,000
Semi-Detached, 2 bed
Elterwater Place, FY3 9UH
£120,000
Semi-Detached, 2 bed
Elterwater Place, FY3 9UH
Entwistle Green
-3d ago
£110,000
End of Terrace, 4 bed
Vicarage Lane, FY4 4LR
£110,000
End of Terrace, 4 bed
Vicarage Lane, FY4 4LR
Entwistle Green
-3d ago
£249,950
Bungalow, 2 bed
Common Edge Road, FY4 5AU
£249,950
Bungalow, 2 bed
Common Edge Road, FY4 5AU
Reeds Rains
-3d ago
£249,950
Bungalow, 2 bed
Common Edge Road, FY4 5AU
£249,950
Bungalow, 2 bed
Common Edge Road, FY4 5AU
Reeds Rains
-3d ago
£160,000
Semi-Detached Bungalow, 2 bed
Wellogate Gardens, FY4 2JP
£160,000
Semi-Detached Bungalow, 2 bed
Wellogate Gardens, FY4 2JP
Martin & Co
-3d ago
£290,000
Detached, 4 bed
Roseacre, FY4 2PN
£290,000
Detached, 4 bed
Roseacre, FY4 2PN
The Square Room
-3d ago
£139,950
Bungalow, 1 bed
Luton Road, FY5 3RS
£139,950
Bungalow, 1 bed
Luton Road, FY5 3RS
The Square Room
-3d ago
£225,000
Semi-Detached, 3 bed
Montpelier Avenue, FY2 9AE
£225,000
Semi-Detached, 3 bed
Montpelier Avenue, FY2 9AE
The Square Room
-3d ago
£145,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Fitzroy Road, FY2 0RL
£145,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Fitzroy Road, FY2 0RL
The Square Room
-3d ago
Get free, no-obligation valuations from the top-performing local agents. Compare fees, services, and track records before you decide.
Compare Agents FreeStart with 2-3 free valuations and ask each agent to justify the price with recent Blackpool sold evidence. A good valuation should reflect your property type, such as the £130,000 terraced average or £185,000 semi-detached average, rather than only a townwide figure. Ask who will conduct viewings, how offers are negotiated and what happens if a survey raises damp or roof issues. The strongest choice is usually the agent who gives the clearest pricing logic.
Estate agent fees in England usually range from 1-3% + VAT, with many sole agency fees around 1.5% + VAT. Online fixed-fee services often cost around £999-£1,999, sometimes payable upfront. On a Blackpool average sale price of £165,000, small percentage differences can still mean hundreds of pounds. Always compare the full cost, tie-in period and any marketing extras before signing.
Yes, Blackpool sold prices are up 2.5% over 12 months, based on homedata.co.uk records. Detached homes have risen by 3.0%, terraced homes by 2.8%, semi-detached homes by 2.0% and flats by 1.5%. The figures show growth, but not at the same rate across every property type. Sellers should use the trend for their own type of home, not just the overall average.
Blackpool is a coastal town with a housing market shaped by tourism, public sector employment and older resort-era construction. Blackpool Pleasure Beach, Blackpool Tower, the Winter Gardens and Blackpool Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust all influence local employment patterns. The town includes conservation areas such as Town Centre and Promenade, Raikes Hall and Stanley Park. Housing ranges from pre-1919 terraces to modern homes at Cottam Hall Gardens.
Sole agency contracts commonly run for 8-16 weeks. That can be reasonable if the agent has a clear launch plan and evidence-based valuation, but long tie-ins are risky if marketing is weak. Check for sole selling rights wording, withdrawal fees and charges for photography or premium advertising. Ask for those points in writing before you instruct.
Online agents can work for sellers who are comfortable managing viewings, chasing feedback and handling parts of the sale. High-street agents may be better for older homes near the Town Centre and Promenade, or properties where survey issues and negotiation need more hands-on work. Hybrid agents sit between those choices. Compare service levels rather than judging only by the headline fee.
Terraced homes in Blackpool average £130,000 and make up around 40-45% of the local housing stock. Many older terraces were built before 1919, with solid brick walls, slate roofs and timber floors. Condition can move the value sharply, especially where damp, roof wear or dated electrics are present. Ask your agent to show recent terraced sales from comparable streets, not just broad town averages.
Yes, schemes such as Foxhall Village, The Gateway and Cottam Hall Gardens give buyers more choice. Foxhall Village includes homes from around £140,000 to £250,000, while Cottam Hall Gardens sits higher with homes from around £240,000 to £400,000. Resale homes need to compete through space, location, garden size, condition or price. Your agent should explain that comparison before launch.
Dampness, roofing defects, timber decay and salt corrosion are common concerns in Blackpool’s coastal housing stock. Clay soils linked with glacial till can also create shrink-swell movement in some areas. Older terraces may show lateral movement, lintel cracking or damp penetration through solid walls. Preparing repair evidence before marketing can reduce renegotiation after survey.
Sale times vary by price, condition and property type. A well-priced terraced home close to the £130,000 average may attract faster interest than an overvalued flat in a slower segment. Detached homes have stronger annual growth at 3.0%, but buyers may still take longer to compare larger homes. The best way to improve speed is to set a realistic launch price and prepare paperwork early.
Ask which recent Blackpool sales support the suggested price, and request evidence for your exact property type. For a flat, ask about lease concerns and service charge questions; for an older terrace, ask how the agent will handle damp or roof condition. You should also ask about fees, contract length and who negotiates offers. A confident agent will answer those questions directly.
Yes, the Irish Sea affects both buyer perception and building condition. Coastal air can accelerate corrosion of metalwork and weather external finishes, while wind exposure can affect roofs, chimneys and render. Homes nearer the Promenade may also face questions about tidal flood risk and storm surges. A good agent should be able to explain these points clearly without weakening your negotiating position.
From £400
A practical survey for conventional Blackpool homes in reasonable condition, including many semi-detached and terraced properties.
From £500
A deeper inspection for older, larger or altered homes, useful for pre-1919 terraces and properties near conservation areas.
From £69
An Energy Performance Certificate is needed before marketing most homes for sale in Blackpool.
From £250
A valuation service for owners who need a Help to Buy redemption figure before selling or remortgaging.
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Compare local agents for a Blackpool home, using sold-price evidence from 2,500 recent sales
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Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.