Houses and apartments run almost dead-level on holiday let yield in Glasgow, with houses fractionally ahead at 35.2% against 35.0% for apartments. The real divergence shows up on buy-to-let, where apartments lead across every bedroom count because their entry prices sit well below equivalent houses while monthly rents do not fall in the same proportion. Both holiday let figures are gross, before service charges on the apartment side and before operating costs on either.
These are city medians across 174 postcode areas. Your specific postcode may sit well above or below, and the bedroom-count picture is not uniform within either property type.
Bedroom-by-Bedroom: Price, Holiday Let and Buy-to-Let Side by Side
City medians across 174 postcodes. Gross yields before service charges (apartments) and before operating costs.
The top combination on holiday let yield in Glasgow is the 4+ bed apartment at 39.7%, while a standard 3-bed house lands at 35.1% on holiday let and 11.4% on buy-to-let. The cross-strategy point matters: a property that wins on holiday let does not always win on buy-to-let, because nightly rates and monthly rents respond to different drivers (tourist demand versus tenant demand).
Why Apartments Lead on Buy-to-Let, and What Narrows the Gap
The mechanism is straightforward: apartments cost less to buy, but they do not rent or let for proportionally less. A 2-bed apartment in Glasgow sells for around £116,093 against £128,992 for an equivalent 2-bed house. Monthly rents and nightly rates compress the gap because tenants and guests pay for liveable space and location, not the freehold land underneath. The result is a structural buy-to-let yield advantage at the apartment end of the market; on holiday let the two property types run almost level.
Service charges erode some of that advantage. Factor inputs in this market estimate annual building service charges at around £1,392 for a 2-bed apartment, and the figure is higher for newer riverside developments with concierge, lift maintenance, and communal heating. Older West End tenement flats with shared stair maintenance run lower. None of this is deducted from the gross yields in the table above, so the effective gap between apartments and houses is narrower than the headline numbers suggest.
There is also a regulatory layer to inspect before exchanging contracts. Many tenement and modern apartment leases in Glasgow contain clauses prohibiting short-term letting, and a freeholder or factor consent is sometimes required even where the lease is silent. Scotland requires a short-term let licence (mandatory since Oct 2022). Licence fee varies by council. Edinburgh is a short-term let control area where secondary letting may also require planning permission for change of use. Edinburgh will introduce a visitor levy on paid overnight accommodation from 24 July 2026. For an apartment intended for holiday letting, the lease wording is at least as important as the licensing rules.
Bedroom Count Tells a Different Story for Each Property Type
House yields tend to strengthen as bedroom count rises in Glasgow, because larger family houses command disproportionately higher nightly rates from group travellers and disproportionately higher rents from sharers. The 4+ bed category is the clearest example of this effect, though it bundles 4, 5, and 6+ bedroom listings, so the median is sensitive to a small number of outliers in either direction.
Apartments behave similarly on holiday let, with yields also rising as bedroom count increases and the 4+ bed apartment category topping the ranking at 39.7%. Three and four-plus-bedroom flats in Glasgow are a thinner segment of the market and the medians can be pulled around by a handful of premium listings in Park Circus, Finnieston, or the Merchant City, so treat the upper end as directional. The buy-to-let curve does not mirror the holiday let curve exactly, which is why the table above shows both side by side.
City Medians Hide a Wide Suburb Spread
These figures are city medians across 174 postcode areas, and the spread is significant. City Centre (G2) leads on buy-to-let yield at 12.2%, with West End/Finnieston (G3) at 12.2% and City Centre (G1) close behind at 12.0%. Outer postcodes with higher prices and softer rents sit well below those numbers. 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 a city-wide average.
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What the Table Does Not Capture
- Service charges: Estimated at around £1,392 per year for a 2-bed apartment in Glasgow, not deducted from the gross yields in the table above. Newer riverside developments and any block with a lift, concierge, or communal heating run materially higher.
- Capital appreciation: Houses generally outperform apartments on long-term value growth in Scotland because you own the land outright. Glasgow tenement flats are a partial exception, with strong demand from owner-occupiers in the West End, but the broader pattern still favours freehold houses.
- Renovation and extension potential: Houses offer optionality, loft conversions, rear extensions, garden rooms, that apartments simply cannot match. That optionality is part of the long-run return on a house and is invisible in a yield calculation.
- Financing constraints: Some lenders restrict mortgages on small studios, high-rise flats, or buildings with cladding issues. The mortgage market for apartments is narrower than for houses, which can affect both purchase and resale.
- 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, so treat this row as directional rather than precise.
- Tax treatment: The Furnished Holiday Lettings tax regime was abolished in April 2025. Holiday letting and buy-to-let are now taxed broadly equivalently, which makes the gross-yield comparison in the table above more decisive than it once was.
Glasgow Sits Well Above National Yield Benchmarks
Glasgow's median 3-bed house price of around £179,156 sits above the Scottish median of £166,453 but well below the UK figure of £253,493. The yield picture is the more striking comparison: Glasgow's 3-bed house buy-to-let yield of 11.4% is comfortably above the Scottish average of 8.7% and roughly double the UK average of 5.7%. Glasgow is firmly a cash-flow market rather than a capital-growth market.
That framing matters for the house-versus-apartment decision. In a high-yield market like Glasgow, the apartment yield premium is large enough in absolute terms to be meaningful even after service charges. In a low-yield, capital-growth market, the same percentage gap might be wiped out by a single year of differential price growth on the house. Edinburgh faces similar dynamics on the apartment side, though tighter holiday let restrictions there change the strategy mix.
Data reflects market conditions as of April 2026. See our market score methodology and data sources for how these figures are calculated.
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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.