Living in Cambridge
14 neighbourhoods · 78 sub-areasCambridge, with around 149,000 people, is one of the most expensive places to rent outside London. A typical 2-bed flat runs about £1,600 a month — well above the national average and a stretch even on a decent salary. What you get in return is a city that's compact, highly educated, and genuinely well connected by rail.
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Rent runs at £1,798 a month — 63% above the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 16% below the national average.
5 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 6 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 50% Outstanding.
Moderate transport links — 69/100; nearest rail station is around 1770 m away; 11 bus stops within five minutes' walk; London is reachable in 75 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: 60% degree-educated.
Living in Cambridge
Cambridge punches at a price point that surprises people who think of it as a quiet university town. It's a small city with a very large job market — around 119,000 jobs for 149,000 residents — and that demand keeps rents high year-round. The university dominates the skyline and the culture, but the tech and life-sciences cluster around the southern fringe means a significant share of residents work in private-sector research and biotech, not just academia. It's a city that suits high earners and researchers; if you're on an average salary, the numbers are tight.
The renter population skews young and highly educated. Students and postdocs fill the streets around the centre, while graduate professionals in their late 20s and 30s cluster in the inner neighbourhoods. Families with children tend to push further out where three-beds are slightly more manageable and school catchments are less contested. Around a third of households are private renters — above the national average — and single-person households make up nearly a third of all homes, which reflects the city's heavy student and early-career demographic.
A 2-bed flat runs about £1,600 a month; a 1-bed around £1,250. Three-beds average roughly £1,900. Council tax (Band D) comes to about £2,467 a year — around £206 a month on top of rent. On a median local salary of around £38,700, rent alone takes up roughly 71% of take-home pay, which is unsustainable for most single renters. Sharers and dual-income couples are effectively the target market for most of the private stock.
The honest trade-off: Cambridge is expensive for what it is geographically. You're paying London-adjacent prices for a small city with no metro or tram network. If your employer isn't local, or you're not on a research-sector salary, the maths rarely works in your favour.
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All areas in Cambridge
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.