Bought for £300k a decade ago? Here’s what it’s worth today — and why Marston Green could outpace the rest

The-True-Cost-of-a-Void-Period-—-And-How-to-Avoid-One.jpg

If you bought a home in the West Midlands for around £300,000 a decade ago, there’s a good chance it’s not just worth substantially more today — it could still be climbing right now, in 2026.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years, taking that £300,000 property to somewhere in the region of £425,000 — with growth climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. And the market hasn’t stood still this year either: prices across the region have continued to edge upward through 2026, keeping the West Midlands on a steady, sustained run. In certain pockets of the region, that growth is about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

Sources:

dont want it to be a direct comparison

Created a file

Created a file

Removed the North West comparison line — the piece now stays focused on West Midlands’ own growth story rather than benchmarking it against other regions.

What a £300,000 home in the West Midlands is really worth 10 years on — and why Marston Green is only just getting started

A homeowner who put £300,000 into a West Midlands property a decade ago could now be sitting on a home worth around £425,000, if it had simply tracked the wider regional market.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years — climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. That’s a strong, steady run of growth, and in certain pockets of the region, it’s about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

want it to be has your £300k property gained in 2026

Edited a file

Edited a file

Updated the headline and opening to speak directly to the reader with a 2026-focused hook, while keeping the 10-year gain and Marston Green/HS2 sections intact.

Has your £300k property gained in 2026?

If you bought a home in the West Midlands for around £300,000 a decade ago, there’s a good chance it’s not just worth substantially more today — it could still be climbing right now, in 2026.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years, taking that £300,000 property to somewhere in the region of £425,000 — with growth climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. And the market hasn’t stood still this year either: prices across the region have continued to edge upward through 2026, keeping the West Midlands on a steady, sustained run. In certain pockets of the region, that growth is about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

Read a file, edited a file

Read a file, edited a file

Headline swapped to option 7. Rest of the piece stays the same — let me know if you’d like the opening line adjusted to match the new headline’s framing more closely.

show me

Read a file

Read a file

Bought for £300k a decade ago? Here’s what it’s worth today — and why Marston Green could outpace the rest

If you bought a home in the West Midlands for around £300,000 a decade ago, there’s a good chance it’s not just worth substantially more today — it could still be climbing right now, in 2026.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years, taking that £300,000 property to somewhere in the region of £425,000 — with growth climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. And the market hasn’t stood still this year either: prices across the region have continued to edge upward through 2026, keeping the West Midlands on a steady, sustained run. In certain pockets of the region, that growth is about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

Ferndown blog draft

Sources:

dont want it to be a direct comparison

Created a file

Created a file

Removed the North West comparison line — the piece now stays focused on West Midlands’ own growth story rather than benchmarking it against other regions.

What a £300,000 home in the West Midlands is really worth 10 years on — and why Marston Green is only just getting started

A homeowner who put £300,000 into a West Midlands property a decade ago could now be sitting on a home worth around £425,000, if it had simply tracked the wider regional market.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years — climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. That’s a strong, steady run of growth, and in certain pockets of the region, it’s about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

want it to be has your £300k property gained in 2026

Edited a file

Edited a file

Updated the headline and opening to speak directly to the reader with a 2026-focused hook, while keeping the 10-year gain and Marston Green/HS2 sections intact.

Has your £300k property gained in 2026?

If you bought a home in the West Midlands for around £300,000 a decade ago, there’s a good chance it’s not just worth substantially more today — it could still be climbing right now, in 2026.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years, taking that £300,000 property to somewhere in the region of £425,000 — with growth climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. And the market hasn’t stood still this year either: prices across the region have continued to edge upward through 2026, keeping the West Midlands on a steady, sustained run. In certain pockets of the region, that growth is about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

Read a file, edited a file

Read a file, edited a file

Headline swapped to option 7. Rest of the piece stays the same — let me know if you’d like the opening line adjusted to match the new headline’s framing more closely.

show me

Read a file

Read a file

Bought for £300k a decade ago? Here’s what it’s worth today — and why Marston Green could outpace the rest

If you bought a home in the West Midlands for around £300,000 a decade ago, there’s a good chance it’s not just worth substantially more today — it could still be climbing right now, in 2026.

Land Registry-based analysis shows average house prices across the West Midlands region have risen by 41.8 per cent over the past 10 years, taking that £300,000 property to somewhere in the region of £425,000 — with growth climbing to nearer 46 per cent for houses specifically, as opposed to flats. And the market hasn’t stood still this year either: prices across the region have continued to edge upward through 2026, keeping the West Midlands on a steady, sustained run. In certain pockets of the region, that growth is about to get a lot more interesting.

One of those pockets is right on our doorstep here at Ferndown Estates: Marston Green, in the Solihull borough.

Why Marston Green is different

Marston Green sits inside what’s known as the UK Central Hub — the corridor of land around Birmingham Airport, the NEC and Birmingham International that’s being transformed by HS2’s new Interchange station, currently under construction at Arden Cross on our doorstep. Main construction ramped up through 2026, with contractors recently lifting 15 huge bridge beams — 565 tonnes in total — into place for the station’s access road, alongside an automated people mover line that will eventually run 1.4 miles between the station, the airport and the NEC.

It’s worth being straight about timing: HS2’s opening stage, running trains between Birmingham and Old Oak Common in London, isn’t now expected until the late 2030s. This is a long-term story, not a quick flip. But that hasn’t stopped the anticipation effect showing up already. Agents across Solihull report prices in the corridor beginning to move and fresh investment and regeneration arriving well ahead of the trains themselves — a pattern seen consistently around major UK infrastructure projects, where nearby property values start responding years before a line actually opens.

A note from Ferndown Estates

“We’ve seen a genuine step-change in interest in Marston Green and the surrounding B37 postcode since HS2 plans for the Interchange station were confirmed,” says a Ferndown Estates spokesperson. “Buyers and investors are increasingly thinking beyond today’s commute times to what this corridor will look like once the station, the airport and the NEC are all connected by rail. We expect that interest — and prices — to keep building steadily as construction progresses, and to accelerate more sharply as completion draws closer. For anyone who owns a home in this area, or is thinking about buying one, this is a corridor worth watching closely over the next decade.”

What it means for local homeowners

For context, the wider Solihull borough already commands an average house price of around £330,000, well above the West Midlands regional average. B37 itself remains comparatively affordable — currently priced below the England average — while also delivering the strongest rental yields in Solihull, making it attractive to both homeowners and investors alike.

If you’re curious what your own West Midlands home might be worth today — whether it’s tracked the regional average, outperformed it, or you’re weighing up a move into the HS2 corridor — get in touch with Ferndown Estates for a free, no-obligation valuation.

Sources:

Should you invest in property near the new HS2 stations? — BuyAssociation

West Midlands House Prices & Property Market Analysis — HouseMetric

West-Midlands house prices in maps and graphs — Plumplot

Exclusive: where UK house prices have risen and fallen over 10 years — LoveMoney

Interchange — HS2.org.uk

HS2 Solihull: 15 Bridge Beams Installed at Interchange Station — Rail Technology Magazine

HS2 6-monthly report to Parliament: May 2026 — GOV.UK

Solihull property market set for surge in demand after HS2 — BuyAssociation

Do you have a property to Sell or Let?

More news that may interest you

Ready to Sell or Let your property?

Are you ready to sell or let your property? At Ferndown Estate Agents, we understand that putting your property on the market can be a big decision. That’s why we’re here to help you every step of the way.