Living in Bolsover
10 neighbourhoods · 50 sub-areasBolsover, in the East Midlands, has around 83,700 people and some of the lowest rents in the region. A 2-bed goes for about £630 a month — roughly half the UK national median — and the median house price sits below £190,000. It's genuinely affordable, but you'll need a car and you'll be commuting a fair distance to reach major employment centres.
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Rent runs at £695 a month — 37% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 19% below the national average.
2 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 1 secondary within a 4 km bus catchment, 100% Good or better.
Weak transport links — 21/100; nearest rail station is around 2880 m away; 3 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Sheffield is reachable in 63 minutes by direct train.
What's around the typical neighbourhood — pubs, cafés, restaurants and supermarkets within walking distance, plus the median GP and hospital proximity.
Census 2021 snapshot: 22% degree-educated, below the national average.
Living in Bolsover
Bolsover is a largely rural district in north Derbyshire, wedged between Chesterfield to the west and Worksop to the east. It's a former coalfield area — the towns are small, the landscape is green, and nearly seven in ten residents own their home. If you want space, quiet, and low outgoings, it delivers. If you want city-centre energy or a short commute, it doesn't.
Most residents here are families and older owner-occupiers. The over-50s make up more than four in ten of the population, and single-person households account for around three in ten homes. Private renters are a minority — just under one in five homes is privately rented — so this isn't a place with a big young professional renter scene. Families tend to spread across the market towns that make up the district.
The cost picture is the headline draw. A 1-bed runs around £490 a month, a 2-bed around £630, and a 3-bed around £730. Council tax (Band D) works out to about £213 a month — on the higher end for what's otherwise a low-cost area. A typical resident can save a house deposit in around 3.2 years, which is well ahead of most of England. Rents have risen about 7% in the past year, so the affordability gap is narrowing, but Bolsover remains cheap by any national measure.
The honest trade-off is connectivity. Nearly 70% of residents commute by car, and public transport covers only about 3% of journeys. The nearest rail station is roughly 3.2 km away — around a 40-minute walk or a short drive. The rail journey to Birmingham takes nearly two hours by public transport, Manchester around two hours, and London close to two and a half. If you're working remotely, that barely matters. If you're office-based in any of those cities, it'll test your patience fast.
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All areas in Bolsover
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