Figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) and HM Land Registry show the median house prices for every middle layer super output area (MSOA) in Greenwich borough for the year ending March 2025.
The data shows the average prices that homeowners paid for their homes when moving to Greenwich over the last 12 months.
According to findings which were published in September last year, Eltham Park was ranked as Greenwich’s most expensive area to live, where prices averaged at £665,000.
Eltham Park is a small area surrounding the park and is made up of Edwardian homes with accessible road parking and access to the park on foot.
The park stretches over 57 acres and offers plenty of space to walk, cycle and run, along with its regular sporting events.
The park is somewhere to see cherry blossom (Image: Emily Davison)
But aside from being a place to get out and about, the park is also somewhere to see cherry blossom in Eltham Park South and bluebells in Eltham Park North during the spring.
Eltham Park is also within a short walking or driving distance of other parks in the borough, like Oxleas Woods and Avery Hill Park.
For would-be homeowners looking for somewhere to live accessible to London, Eltham Park is within a 15-minute walk of Eltham station, with trains running to London Charing Cross and London Bridge within 30 minutes.
Meanwhile, the nearby high street offers many amenities such as a gym and library, along with a cinema, shops and multiple places to eat and drink, as well as bus connections to places like Greenwich, Lewisham and Bexley.
Families living in and around Eltham Park also benefit from access to several ‘outstanding’ rated schools within a one-mile radius of the area.
These include Deansfield Primary School, Gordon Primary School and St Thomas More Catholic Comprehensive School.

