It’s the place to be. Quality of life is the key to dramatic house price rises in Inverness
Author
Kirsty Johansson
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The news that house prices in Inverness have risen further that in any other part of Scotland over the past 20 years is gratifying, but hardly surprising. The city is, simply, a really lovely place to live.
On the doorstep of some of the most beautiful scenery imaginable – countryside which is attracting tourists in their droves – the capital of the Highlands has been transformed over the last couple of decades.
When we hear that the average cost of a property in this elegant northern city has, according to the Bank of Scotland, increased by 259% since 1998, the first instinct is to be wary of statistics.
However, translated into personal terms, I recall that the first house I bought in Inverness when I moved here from Fife 20 years ago cost £70,000 – and sold recently for £210,000. One bed flats which were available for £30,000 in 1998 now fetch £90,000 to £100,000. So the figures add up.
But why are people so keen to buy into an outpost on the cold, northern fringes of Europe that they are pushing prices up at such a prodigious rate? Quality of life is the simple answer.
The city regularly tops the Scottish quality of life indices and it is in the top five in the UK. It is an irresistibly attractive proposition not only for people who want to raise children in an amenable environment, but also for people who want to retire comfortably and safely.
We also have to take into account that Inverness has changed out of all recognition over the period. Twenty years ago, let’s be honest, it was just a town. Now it is a thriving regional centre which is ticking all the boxes for inward investment.
In 1998, Lifescan – one of Scotland’s largest life sciences businesses – did not exist in Inverness. Now it employs 1100 people in high quality jobs and makes products for the treatment of diabetes.
Highland Council, another major employer, serves a third of the land area of Scotland – to give an idea of that scale, it is 10 times larger than Luxembourg, 20% larger than Wales and nearly the size of Belgium.
To accommodate the city’s expansion, there has been huge growth in housebuilding, particularly on the south side where whole new suburbs have been, and continue to be, created by local builders such as Tulloch.
Help to Buy has been a significant catalyst for this expansion and has led to a change in pattern whereby first-time buyers – who previously would have started with a small flat – are going straight to three bed semis in the £200,000 range.
Access has also improved over the term, with the airport now linked to continental Europe and handling 875,000 passengers last year, up 12% on the previous year. Eventually, there will also be dual carriageway all the way to Perth on the A9.
In 1998, all the retail activity was in the then town centre, serviced by traditional shops and businesses. Now, like other cities, the outskirts are brimming with retail parks and pavilion office buildings.
There has also been a marked expansion in the hotel and hospitality sector to deal with unprecedented numbers of tourists drawn to the magnet of Outlander locations such as Culloden and the thrills of the unimaginably successful North Coast 500 route – which, of course, begins and ends in the city.
Cruise ships carrying thousands of free-spending passengers – which used to dock once in a blue moon in Invergordon – are now daily visitors, bringing sustainable and predictable employment to countless local bus companies and other ancillary businesses.
Like everywhere else in the UK, the city has had its ups and downs since the crash in 2008. But there is no doubt that this is one of the ups. It’s a good time to be living, working and enjoying life in Inverness.
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