E7 — London
E7 is London's patch in Newham — this page and its game board are built from 15,187 sales over 32 years of recorded sales in 8 areas.
From £49,000 in 1995 to £565,000 in 2026: the E7 median multiplied 11.5× across the dataset. The best vintage to have bought was around 2000, when the local median jumped +24.9% in a single year. Worst year on the board: 2009, at -13.3%. The simulation does not soften it.
Median sold price in E7
| Year | Median sold price | Sales |
|---|---|---|
| 1995 | £49,000 | 622 |
| 2000 | £89,950 | 855 |
| 2005 | £195,000 | 598 |
| 2010 | £220,000 | 252 |
| 2015 | £320,000 | 451 |
| 2020 | £440,000 | 286 |
| 2025 | £510,000 | 314 |
| 2026 | £565,000 | 55 |
The areas on the board
These are the 8 areas on the board, ranked by how much of the local market they carry:
- London (E7 8) (33% of local sales) — busiest streets: Katherine Road, Romford Road, Shrewsbury Road
- London (E7 9) (29% of local sales) — busiest streets: Ramsay Road, Odessa Road, Earlham Grove
- London (E7 0) (28% of local sales) — busiest streets: Dames Road, Godwin Road, Capel Road
- Forest Gate (8% of local sales) — busiest streets: Thorpe Road, Boleyn Road, Osborne Road
- Manor Park (2% of local sales) — busiest streets: Romford Road
- Reardon Street (0% of local sales)
- Kinson Road (0% of local sales)
- Peckham Rye (0% of local sales)
The data is real and so are the down years. Draft six properties on the E7 board.
Local business? Put your name on the E7 board — one sponsor per postcode.
Prices are medians of real Land Registry sales. Street lists show street names only — never individual addresses. New to the game? Start with how to play.