Every figure on this page comes from the public record: 1,781 sales registered with HM Land Registry in TA14 (Stoke-Sub-Hamdon) since 1995, each one a completed purchase at a real price, plus current rental figures from the ONS. Nothing here is a valuation, an estimate or an asking price.
Sales data to March 2026. Rents: ONS, May 2026. Regenerated with every monthly data refresh.
TA14 is the postcode district covering Stoke-sub-Hamdon, Norton-sub-Hamdon, Chiselborough in Stoke-Sub-Hamdon. Districts are a practical way to slice a market: small enough to mean something locally, big enough to have a steady flow of sales to measure.
Where TA14 sits
Click the map to open TA14 on the live map, with every sale plotted at its address. The average pricing view shades the whole country the same way.
£262,500median sold price, 2026
-6%five-year change (cash)
62sales in the last 12 months
4.5%gross rental yield (est.)
What a home in TA14 sells for
The 2026 median in TA14 is £262,500, from 8 registered sales; the mean, £295,800, sits modestly above it, the usual shape of a market with an expensive tail.
For scale: the England and Wales median is £274,000, so TA14 trades 4% below the country as a whole.
The price of a typical TA14 home, 1995 to 2026
The median as recorded at the time, and each year restated in today's money (ONS CPIH), the sharper test of whether homes really got dearer. Hover for the year-by-year figures; click a legend entry to isolate a series.
Price at the timeIn today's money (CPIH)
See this chart as a table
Year
Median (cash)
Median (today's £)
Sales
2026
£262,500
£262,500
8
2025
£325,000
£325,000
57
2024
£267,500
£277,765
50
2023
£292,500
£313,880
43
2022
£387,500
£443,776
64
2021
£278,500
£344,382
86
2020
£295,000
£373,829
60
2019
£250,000
£320,037
65
2018
£299,000
£389,264
68
2017
£221,500
£295,048
50
2016
£233,500
£319,040
62
2015
£222,500
£307,050
59
2014
£220,800
£305,928
56
2013
£176,500
£248,035
46
2012
£250,000
£359,375
40
2011
£202,500
£298,558
38
2010
£228,500
£349,978
38
2009
£190,000
£298,294
39
2008
£225,500
£361,009
30
2007
£230,000
£381,032
67
2006
£201,500
£341,609
76
2005
£177,200
£307,980
42
2004
£190,000
£337,018
70
2003
£186,000
£334,654
79
2002
£130,000
£238,881
53
2001
£137,500
£258,163
68
2000
£115,800
£221,950
67
1999
£93,500
£181,989
59
1998
£84,000
£165,600
71
1997
£58,200
£116,569
62
1996
£51,000
£105,045
65
1995
£50,000
£106,154
43
In cash terms the typical TA14 home went from £50,000 in 1995 to £262,500 in 2026, roughly 5 times the price. Even after inflation that is a real rise of about 147%: homes here genuinely became dearer, not just more expensive on paper. Measured in today's money the market peaked in 2022; the current median sits about 41% below that. Someone who bought at the 2022 peak has not yet seen that price back in real terms.
Year-on-year change in the TA14 median
Each bar is the change on the year before, in cash. The zero line is the boundary between rising and falling.
The strongest year on record here is 1998 (+44.3% on the year before); the weakest, 2013 (−29.4%). Single-year swings like these are why the annualised table below matters more than any one year's headline.
Annualised returns
Period
Cash, per year
Real terms, per year
1 years (since 2025)
−19.2%
−19.2%
5 years (since 2021)
−1.2%
−5.3%
10 years (since 2016)
+1.2%
−1.9%
20 years (since 2006)
+1.3%
−1.3%
Compound annual growth of the median sold price; the real column deflates by ONS CPIH. Annualised figures smooth the cycle (the chart above shows the cycle), and past growth is a record, not a forecast.
Transaction volumes
How many homes change hands
Recorded sales per year. The dip after 2008 is the financial crisis; the last bar is still filling in as recent sales get registered.
The last five years, month by month
Monthly registrations. The sawtooth is seasonal; the register runs weeks behind completions at the right-hand edge.
TA14 recorded 62 sales in the last twelve months of data. Like most of England and Wales, turnover never fully recovered from 2008: the market here averaged 65 sales a year before the financial crisis and 44 a year over the last five. Volume matters as much as price: when few homes change hands, the median gets jumpy and a single street can move the figure. The most recent year is always still filling in, because sales appear in the Land Registry weeks or months after completion.
What homes rent for around TA14
TA14 falls under Somerset, where the ONS puts the average private rent at £990 a month (May 2026 figures). A one-bed averages £674 a month here and a four-or-more-bed £1,580, so size does most of the work in setting the rent.
Average monthly rent by size, Somerset
ONS Price Index of Private Rents, May 2026.
Set against the £262,500 median sold price, £990 a month is £11,880 a year, a gross yield of 4.5%: gross, before letting costs, voids, maintenance and tax, so a ceiling rather than a promise. Rents are published at local-authority level, so nearby districts in the same authority share these figures.
Will TA14 prices rise from here?
Nobody can tell you that, and this page will not pretend to. What the record shows: the median is down 6% over five years in cash but down 24% after inflation. If you are weighing a purchase, read the volume chart alongside the price one, and remember that every figure here is a completed sale, lagged by the weeks it takes the Land Registry to register it.
Ladders and snakes: five-year risers and fallers
TA14 ranks 22 of 24 in the TA area on five-year growth. The gap between the top and bottom of this chart is the difference between buying well and buying badly in the same city.
Five-year change in the median, TA area districts
The biggest risers and fallers in cash terms; every row links to that district's report.
Inside TA14, street group by street group
Postcode sectors are the next slice down, each a group of streets. Prices can differ sharply between two sectors a few minutes' walk apart.
How this page is made: the statistics are computed from HM Land Registry Price Paid Data (Crown copyright, OGL v3.0), geocoded to address level; inflation adjustment uses the ONS CPIH index; rents are the ONS Price Index of Private Rents at local-authority level. Medians of recorded sales, not valuations. Nothing on this page is financial advice.