26, High Street, OL15 8PQ
26 High Street is a 95 m² / 1,023 sq ft detached home in Littleborough. It sold for £175,000 in October 2016. Indexed forward to today's value, that sale is roughly £273k. Recent local prices imply a broad valuation context of £200k to £295k based on its internal area. The Land Registry and EPC data was last updated 2 July 2026.
- Sale history
-
£175,000 on Oct 2016
- Floor plan
-
Archived estate agent floor plan for 26, High Street.
- Internal area
- 95 square metres (1,023 square feet) according to latest EPC inspection
- Price per internal area
-
This property sold for £1,842 per square metre (£171 per square foot) in Oct 2016. Indexed forward to today's value, this is roughly £2,870 per square metre (£267 per square foot) .
Date Paid price Paid £/sqm Today's value Today's value £/sqm Oct 2016 £175,000 £1,842 £272,603 £2,870 Calculated using the latest EPC internal area of 95 m². Earlier sale dates may not have had the same measured area available.
- Valuation
- The most recent sale price indexed forward to today's value is £272,603. This is one data point to inform the valuation. Another method is the valuation implied by what comparable homes are selling for. Homes in Littleborough are now selling for between £2,110 and £3,110 per square metre (£196 and £288 per square foot). Based on an internal area of 95 m², this implies a valuation between £200,000 and £295,000. Treat this as context only. For a valuation using hand-picked comparable sales, use the Advanced search tool — create a shortlist of similar condition homes, then export a valuation report.
- Bedrooms
- na
- Type
- Detached
- Council tax band
- D
- Plot size
- 307 square metres (3,305 square feet) - map showing freehold boundary lines
- Planning ref:
- August 2024 24/00601/WTTPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application approved with conditions
- Address:
- Land Rear Of 26 High Street (within Garden Of East House/Stubley New Hall/Holme Lea), Littleborough
- Description:
- Application for works to trees within group G7 of TPO No. 003 consisting of:-T1 (Common Beech) - crown lift 5 metres and cut back north side of the tree's crown by 2 metres up to the same height.(no photos showing pruning locations - target prune in accordance with BS3998: 2010).T2 (Common Beech) - remove the branch extending horizontally across Stubley Lane and over number 26 High Street with a view to helping to reduce leaf fall into the garden of number 26 High Street.T3 (Whitebeam) - remove the low primary limb extending from the main stem to the northeast over Stubley Lane to help rebalance tree and with a view to helping to reduce leaf fall into the garden of number 26 High Street.T4 (Whitebeam) - remove the lowest limb extending from the main stem over Stubley Lane to help rebalance the tree and reduce leaf fall into garden.
- Planning ref:
- May 2022 22/00502/WTTPO
- Type:
- Tree and hedge works
- Status:
- Application refused
- Address:
- Land Opposite The Rear Of 26 High Street, Littleborough
- Description:
- Application to remove two White Beams (T1 and T2) subject to Tree Preservation Order No.003
- Summary:
- 12 February 2016 - energy performance certificate grade D
- Certificate:
- View energy certificate on GOV.UK
- Reason for EPC:
- Marketed sale
- Tenure:
- Owner-occupied
- Property type:
- Detached Bungalow , has 5 habitable rooms. Estimated year built 1991 to 1995
- Area:
- 95 sqm (1,023 square foot) total internal area
- Comments:
- Walls: Cavity wall, as built, insulated (assumed). Roof: Pitched, 270 mm loft insulation. Heating: Boiler and radiators, mains gas.
26 High Street is worth whatever price a willing buyer and seller agree upon. However, the following can provide useful context.
- HouseMetric estimates the most recent sale price indexed forward to today's value is £272,603.
- Based on an internal area of 95 m² and recent prices in Littleborough, this implies a lower and upper quartile range from £200,000 to £295,000, using HouseMetric's implied valuation methodology.
For more detail on HouseMetric data sources, update frequency and valuation methods, see the HouseMetric FAQs.