
With an average sale price of £1,371,456 in the last five years (a figure which rises to over £1.5M if you remove an outlier sold for £80K) it is the most expensive of the pink Monopoly properties. Neighboured by some of the most prestigious and beautiful buildings in London, including Buckingham Palace, The London Library, St James’s Palace, Chatham House and His Majesty’s Theatre, it is no surprise that properties sold in Pall Mall achieve a high price tag. Pall MallĢ023 Average → £1,312,500 Northumberland Avenue The Angel Islington (which we’ve used Islington High Street prices for) has only seen two sales in the last five years, while Euston Road has seen 14, all of which were apartments within the highly sought-after St Pancras Chambers and Lizmans House buildings. While Pentonville Road is the most expensive light blue property on the board, this isn’t reflected in the real prices.

Regularly achieving sales above £1 million, with the average prices over the last five years remaining above this milestone for both The Angel Islington and Euston Road, there is a sharp jump up from the brown properties, despite many of the sales also being for apartments. Sky blue in colour, the next-most expensive properties on the Monopoly board are that of The Angel Islington, Euston Road and Pentonville Road. The Angel IslingtonĢ023 Average → £1,166,786 Pentonville Road

Even so, the £400,000 – £450,000 average sale price still far-exceeds the average house price for the UK as a whole, which came to £286,000 in April 2023. Looking at the sales themselves, lots sold on both streets typically consist of flats of between 1-3 bedrooms, helping to explain the lower cost in comparison to other areas of London. Whitechapel RoadĬolour-coded as brown in the traditional game, Whitechapel Road and Old Kent Road are the cheapest on the board, both in terms of Monopoly’s pricing of £60 each, and in relation to the real life value of properties for these streets. In this post, we’ll discuss the average sale prices of these iconic areas of London, as well as fill in some more spaces on the board with modern figures, including the utility properties, tax spaces and how much you would really get for passing go. As property enthusiasts who are interested in all things related to the UK market, we’ve researched the real value of the London Monopoly properties and created our own realistic board. In light of the countless economic changes we’ve seen since 1935, and the ever-increasing real life prices these premium London postcodes demand, it’s unsurprising that the board’s traditional property prices, taxes, and penalties have become outdated.

Featuring the iconic streets of London, including tourist hotspots like Piccadilly and Oxford Street, the London board’s locations have remained the same over the years and, with the exception of the Monopoly: Here & Now edition, so too have the prices. 4th August 2023 The Monopoly board with real house prices 2023įirst released in 1935, the standard UK edition of the classic Monopoly game is widely regarded as one of the most popular board games from the last century.
