Apartments win the holiday let yield contest in North Yorkshire because entry prices are dramatically lower than houses, while nightly rates compress less than purchase prices do. A 2-bed apartment sells for around £142,557, roughly 55% the cost of a 3-bed house at £260,623, yet the nightly rate gap is far narrower. That asymmetry produces apartment gross yields of 13.7% against 9.0% for houses, a gap of 4.6% on the headline numbers.
These are gross figures before apartment service charges, council tax during voids, and the running costs that erode every holiday letting business. They also reflect city-level medians across 310 postcodes in the county, so your specific postcode may sit well above or below these central figures.
Holiday Let and Buy-to-Let Yields by Bedroom Count
County medians across 310 postcodes. Gross yields before service charges (apartments) and before operating costs.
The best-performing combination in this county is a 4+ bed apartment at 14.9% gross for holiday letting. Buy-to-let yields, by contrast, sit in a tighter band across every bedroom count and both property types, reflecting the smoother pricing logic of annual residential contracts. If you plan to switch strategies, the relative ranking of houses versus apartments is worth inspecting at your target bedroom count, because the winner on holiday let is not always the winner on buy-to-let.
Why Apartments Yield More, and What Closes the Gap
The mechanism is entry price, not nightly rate. A 2-bed apartment at around £142,557 competes for tourist bookings against a £230,103 2-bed house, yet the nightly rates do not differ by anything like the same ratio. Short breaks for couples and small groups price off amenity, location, and photos rather than freehold versus leasehold title. That compression at the top of the revenue line, combined with the heavy discount at the bottom, is what generates the apartment yield premium.
Service charges close a meaningful portion of that premium. For a 2-bed apartment in this market the estimated annual charge sits at around £1,527, and none of it is subtracted from the gross yields in the table above. Newer purpose-built blocks with concierge, lifts, and gym facilities charge materially more than older converted stock, and resort or coastal developments aimed at second-home buyers often have the steepest bills. Add ground rent on leases with periodic reviews and the effective apartment yield contracts further.
Leasehold restrictions are the other correction. A significant share of apartment leases prohibit short-term letting outright, and others require landlord consent or restrict occupancy to a single household. Always obtain the lease and the managing agent's confirmation before exchanging, because a holiday-let ban inside the lease will override any amount of Rightmove optimism about nightly rates.
How Yields Move as Properties Get Larger
The bedroom count curve tells different stories for houses and apartments in North Yorkshire. Houses reward scale: larger houses command disproportionately higher nightly rates from group travellers and family holidays, and the purchase price premium for an extra bedroom is more modest than the nightly uplift. In a rural and market-town county with strong group-stay demand, a 4+ bed cottage competing for Yorkshire Dales walking weekends and Whitby family breaks justifies its yield mathematically as well as visually.
The apartment curve is more complex because supply thins and pricing turns luxury at the top end. Smaller urban apartments trade on weekend-break demand at prices that keep yields elevated, while the 4+ bed apartment category is a narrow slice of the market dominated by high-price refurbished conversions in York and coastal resort stock. Treat 4+ bed apartment numbers with caution as the category bundles 4, 5, and 6+ bedroom listings, and a handful of outliers can pull the median materially.
Suburb Variation Dwarfs the House-Apartment Gap
Within the county's 310 postcodes, individual markets diverge substantially. Strensall (YO32) tops the buy-to-let yield ranking at 5.9% on a median price of £295,337, while Richmond (DL10) posts 5.4% at a lower entry point of £243,648. The picture changes again for holiday letting, where visitor demand concentrates in Dales gateway postcodes, North York Moors villages, and the coastal stretch from Scarborough to Whitby. The dashboard shows suburb-level data for every bedroom count and property type, so you can compare within the specific area you are evaluating rather than relying on county-wide averages.
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What the Table Does Not Capture
- Service charges: Estimated at around £1,527 per year for a 2-bed apartment in this market, not deducted from the gross yields in the table above. Ground rent and major works levies sit on top.
- Capital appreciation: Houses usually outperform apartments on long-term value growth because you own the land. In North Yorkshire this is pronounced, with village and market-town freeholds typically appreciating more reliably than coastal or urban leasehold flats.
- Renovation potential: Houses offer optionality (extensions, loft conversions, garden offices, hot tubs) that apartments cannot match. For holiday letting specifically, the ability to add a hot tub or sleep an extra couple is often the single biggest lever on nightly rate.
- Financing constraints: Some lenders restrict mortgages on small apartments, ex-local-authority blocks, or properties above commercial premises, and specialist holiday-let mortgages are a narrower market than standard buy-to-let products.
- Planning permission: Outside Greater London there is no 90-night cap, but converting a dwelling to commercial holiday use can require planning permission (change of use) in some authorities. The FHL tax regime was abolished from April 2025, so the tax advantage that historically favoured holiday letting no longer exists, making the gross comparison above more decision-relevant than ever.
- 4+ bed data breadth: The 4+ bed category bundles 4, 5, and 6+ bedroom listings. A small number of outlier properties can pull the median in either direction.
North Yorkshire in Regional and National Context
North Yorkshire's median 3-bed house price of £260,623 sits above the Yorkshire and The Humber regional median of £201,478 and close to the national median of £253,493. This is a relatively pricier corner of the region, reflecting York's economic pull, the Dales and Moors heritage premium, and strong coastal second-home demand. The buy-to-let gross yield of 5.4% is below the regional median of 5.6% and broadly in line with the UK median of 5.7%.
For investors, that profile points toward the holiday let lens rather than pure cash-flow buy-to-let. Tourism demand is the mechanism that pushes gross yields into the 10.0% region, and it is more location-specific than residential rent. A Dales or coastal postcode tilts the maths toward holiday letting; a commuter-belt postcode near York serving Leeds and York workers tilts it back toward buy-to-let. The house-vs-apartment decision has to be read through that strategic choice, not in isolation.
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026.
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See also market score methodology and data sources for how these figures are calculated. Barkerend (BD3) Leads Bradford Yields at 10.1% and Strensall (YO32) Leads North Yorkshire Yields at 5.9% cover related questions for comparable markets.
This information is for educational purposes only and should not be considered financial or legal advice. Regulations and market conditions change frequently. Verify current rules with local authorities before making investment decisions.