Recent activity in Kidderminster covers a full range of homes, from flats at an average of £114,063 to detached properties at £336,507. The town's 568 sales in the last 12 months show that buyers are still committing, despite transaction numbers being 27% lower than the previous year. That makes presentation and pricing sharper. A property that feels slightly overpriced in DY10 2 can sit longer than a well-priced equivalent with stronger comparable evidence.
New-build activity is also shaping buyer expectations. Woven Oaks by Taylor Wimpey sits off Comberton Road on the eastern edge of Kidderminster, with 2, 3 and 4-bedroom homes across detached, semi-detached and terraced layouts. Phase two is linked to a reserved matters planning application with Wyre Forest District Council for up to 1,450 new homes. Existing sellers near Comberton Road need an agent who can position older homes against brand-new stock, incentives and fresh layouts.
Habberley Park on Habberley Road adds another important reference point. Bovis Homes, part of Vistry Group, started construction in Q1 2024, with 120 homes planned and first homes on sale from Spring 2024. The scheme includes 2, 3 and 4-bedroom houses, four bungalows, two custom-build plots and affordable housing including 18 houses and 12 one and two-bedroom apartments. Resale homes on the north-western edge of Kidderminster should be priced with that competition in mind.
Town-centre regeneration may influence the market over a longer horizon. Lion Fields covers the former Glades Leisure Centre, Bromsgrove Street car park and Worcester Street sites, with plans for almost 150 townhouses and apartments. Dunclent Crescent also has proposals for 11 two-bed homes, nine three-bed homes, two four-bed homes, 11 one-bed flats and 15 two-bed flats. Sellers should ask agents how these schemes affect buyer choice now, not just after construction begins.
- Woven Oaks off Comberton Road is relevant for family-house competition
- Habberley Park brings new homes to the Habberley Road side of town
- Lion Fields could alter town-centre apartment and townhouse supply
- Dunclent Crescent adds another local housing pipeline to watch