Placetrics
District in Nottinghamshire

Living in Ashfield

16 neighbourhoods · 77 sub-areas

Ashfield, in the East Midlands, is a district of around 130,000 people and one of the most affordable places to rent in the region. A typical 2-bed goes for about £710 a month — well under the UK median and a fraction of what you'd pay in London. That affordability comes with trade-offs worth knowing before you commit.

Verdict
Stands out for
  • schools nearby (top quarter nationally)
  • affordable rent (top quarter nationally)
Watch out for
  • weaker schools (bottom quarter nationally)
  • high crime (bottom quarter nationally)
Crime / 1k / yr
34/ 100
84.9
Bottom quarter nationally · 15% below nat. avg
Good schools
88/ 100
83%
Bottom quarter nationally
Commute to hub
58/ 100
66 min
About average
Jobs density
55/ 100
0.43
About average
2-bed rent
83/ 100
£708/mo
Top quarter nationally · 1-bed £546 · 3-bed £826 · +4.3% YoY
Council tax
77/ 100
£1,992/yr
£166/mo

Overview

Overview

Living in Ashfield

Ashfield is a largely car-dependent district centred on Kirkby-in-Ashfield and Hucknall, with a mix of former mining towns and newer residential estates. It's not a glossy urban destination — there's no city centre to speak of — but it offers something real: low rents, green space close to most front doors, and solid broadband. The average resident is in their 50s, owns their home, and works locally or commutes by car. If you're after cultural buzz, this isn't it. If you want space and low outgoings, it delivers.

The renter base here is smaller than in most comparable districts — only around one in six homes is privately rented, well below the national average. Most residents own outright or are buying. The population skews older, with roughly one in five people aged 65 or over, and the 18–34 group is relatively thin on the ground. That shapes what the area feels like day to day: quieter, more settled, family-oriented rather than social-scene driven.

Rent is the main draw. A one-bed typically costs around £550 a month, a two-bed around £710, and a three-bed around £830. Council tax for a Band D property runs to about £2,600 a year — roughly £217 a month on top of rent. The median property sale price is under £200,000, and on an average local salary you'd save a deposit in roughly 3.5 years, which is genuinely fast by English standards.

The honest trade-off is transport. Almost two-thirds of residents drive to work, and public transport is thin — only around 4% commute by bus or train. The nearest rail station is about 2km away on a straight line. Rail commutes to Birmingham take around 95 minutes and to London around 140 minutes, so if you need to get to a major city regularly, factor in the time and cost.

LLM-summarised from ONS, MHCLG, DfT, Police.uk and Land Registry data.

Peers

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All sub-areas

All sub-areas in Ashfield

Every local area, ordered by crawl priority. Most readers want the neighbourhood-level view — these are for deep-link cases or external search-engine arrivals.