Graham Norton has relisted his London home for £4.25 million after cutting £700,000 from the asking price. The Grade II Georgian house on the River Thames in Wapping has stayed on the market for more than a year, turning a high-end sale into a test of whether the lower number will finally move it.
The new figure follows an original £4.95 million listing in April 2025. Norton lived in the property for two decades before deciding to sell, and he said, "I have loved my time in Pier Head over the last 20 years."
Wapping house, four floors
The home dates back to 1811 and spans four floors. Its layout includes a large hallway, two reception rooms, three double bedrooms, a bright open-plan entertaining space, and a principal suite across the entire top floor.
Historic features are doing some of the heavy lifting here: vaulted ceilings, wooden beams, original floorboards, a secluded private garden, a pretty inner courtyard, and access to the beach revealed twice daily at low tide. The house forms part of two terraces originally built for the Dock Masters and Customs Offices, with the former entrance to the London Docks now serving as a garden between the homes.
Knight Frank and Simon Boulton
Knight Frank is handling the sale, and Simon Boulton says it is incredibly rare to find a Georgian property of this quality and scale overlooking the Thames. He also points to the converted warehouse space as a flexible part of the property, adding that the house offers a meticulously preserved piece of maritime heritage.
The sale has a clear complication: the property was one of two homes Norton put up for sale last May, and the London listing is still unsold after a prolonged run on the market. That leaves the reduced price doing the work the original figure could not, and it puts the next move with buyers who want Thames frontage, listed status, and a lower entry point than before.
Norton has already shown he will split his holdings when the price is right: his historic New York carriage house in Manhattan’s Murray Hill neighbourhood sold for $5.3 million after he bought it from Claudia Schiffer in 2002. This London sale now stands on its own, and £4.25 million is the number that has to do the persuading.







