London's prime central postcodes — SW1, SW3, W1 — hold some of Europe's most coveted residential addresses, anchored by Mayfair, Knightsbridge, Belgravia, and Chelsea.
Few markets blend heritage and scarcity the way prime central London does. Demand is global and constant — old European money, Gulf families, North American funds and Asian buyers all compete for a fixed stock of listed Georgian terraces, garden-square mansions and converted mews. Supply rarely moves, conservation rules limit new construction, and the best addresses change hands quietly, often off-market. The result is a market that rewards patience, discretion and a clear understanding of where lasting value sits.
Mayfair: the heart of the West End
Bound by Hyde Park, Oxford Street, Regent Street, and Piccadilly, Mayfair remains the most prestigious address in the capital. Georgian townhouses line streets like Charles Street, while garden squares such as Mount Street and Berkeley Square offer green calm in the centre of the city. A new generation of branded residences — Mandarin Oriental, Four Seasons, Twenty Grosvenor Square — has added full-service living to the mix. Lateral floors above 4,000 sq ft trade at £4,000–£8,000 per sq ft, placing Mayfair firmly among the world's most expensive residential markets.
Knightsbridge & Belgravia
Knightsbridge is defined by One Hyde Park, still the benchmark for ultra-prime apartment living and record-breaking sales. Neighbouring Belgravia trades on a quieter grandeur — its white stucco terraces frame Eaton Square, Chester Square and Wilton Crescent, where ambassadors and dynasties have lived for generations. Together the two postcodes offer the rare combination of parkside location, embassy-grade security and unbroken architectural rhythm.
Chelsea & South Kensington
Chelsea and South Kensington pair village charm with riverside grandeur, drawing families who want space and character without leaving zone one.
- Chelsea mews houses — converted Victorian stable blocks tucked behind the main streets, prized for privacy and typically trading at £8–25M.
- Cheyne Walk — riverside Georgian houses fronting the Thames, rarely available and seldom listed above £40M.
- The Boltons & Pelham Crescent — embassy-grade townhouses on two of the most exclusive crescents in the capital.
The new prime: Marylebone, Notting Hill, Holland Park
A younger generation of billionaires increasingly bypasses Mayfair for the leafier, more relaxed grandeur of Holland Park, Marylebone and Notting Hill. Trophy houses on Lansdowne Road and Elgin Crescent now change hands above £20M, signalling a clear shift in where new wealth chooses to settle.


