The legend of A Nightmare on Elm Street lives on

If you happen to live on Elm Street you may not want to read much further...

When online estate agents HouseSimple.com delved a little deeper into the figures, it unearthed a chilling statistic. Over the past decade, there have been 666 – the number of the Beast – property sales on UK Elm Streets.

If that doesn’t make you want to put the for sale sign up straight away, I don’t know what would!

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One in ten Elm Streets seem to have been afflicted with the curse of sharing the same name as the 1984 slasher movie, as there have been no registered sales in 10 years on Elm Streets in Manchester, Rossendale, Belfast, Glasgow, Ellesmere Port, Coatbridge, Birkenhead and London.

Mr Krueger: Not someone you would invite round for tea and cakes.Mr Krueger: Not someone you would invite round for tea and cakes.
Mr Krueger: Not someone you would invite round for tea and cakes.

Also, average property prices on Elm Streets across the country, at £180,114, are almost a fifth lower (18%) than the UK average of £218,964 according to Land Registry figures. Maybe buyers have been spooked by the infamous name – after all, who would want Freddy Krueger as a neighbour?

Alex Gosling, CEO HouseSimple.com, said: “It sounds like a horror movie sequel, but for hundreds of homeowners, the curse of Elm Street could actually be a grim reality. No sales since last Halloween on more than half the 79 Elm Streets we found suggests there’s more going on than subsidence to scare buyers away.

“And we nearly leapt out of our skin when we discovered the number of sales on UK’s Elm Streets in the past decade was the devil’s number. It’s enough to send a shiver down the spine.

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“Fortunately not everyone is spooked by Halloween and with Elm Street prices below the UK average, I’m sure there are plenty of buyers who would snap up the chance to live on such an infamously named street. They just wouldn’t want Mr F Krueger living next door.”

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