Living in Huntingdonshire
22 neighbourhoods · 111 sub-areasHuntingdonshire, with around 190,000 people spread across Cambridgeshire's market towns and villages, is one of the more affordable districts in the East of England. A 2-bed typically runs about £955 a month — noticeably below the national median and well under half what you'd pay in central London. The trade-off is car dependency and a long public-transport haul to the capital.
Best for…
Pick a renter archetypeArea overview
Skim every section on this page in one scroll. Each card gives an overall rating plus the headline stats — tap any heading to jump to the full section with charts, breakdowns and methodology.
Rent runs at £1,046 a month — broadly in line with the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 42% 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 — 12/100; nearest rail station is around 5736 m away; 4 bus stops within five minutes' walk; London is reachable in 118 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: high owner-occupation (75%).
Living in Huntingdonshire
Huntingdonshire is a largely rural district of market towns, villages and fenland. Huntingdon itself is the main centre, with St Ives, St Neots and Ramsey holding their own. It's quieter than Cambridge or Peterborough, oriented around families, homeowners and people who prefer space over buzz. If you want an urban centre with late bars and a dense restaurant scene, this isn't it — but if you want a decent-sized garden and a manageable mortgage, you're in the right county.
Ownership is the dominant tenure here — almost seven in ten households own their home, which is well above the national average. Private renters make up only around one in six households. That shapes the area: most long-term residents are settled couples and families, and the community feel in the market towns is stronger than you'd expect for a district this close to a major city. Students are largely absent; Huntingdonshire doesn't have a university of its own.
A 2-bed flat runs about £955 a month; a 3-bed house is around £1,155. Council tax (Band D) comes to roughly £2,556 a year — around £213 a month — which is above average for England. The median home price is around £330,000, and on a typical local salary you'd need roughly five years to save a deposit. Rent typically absorbs close to half of take-home pay for private renters, which is stretched given salaries here aren't high.
The honest catch is transport. Over half of residents drive to work, and fewer than 3% use public transport. The nearest rail station is, on average, more than 6 km away from typical homes — a drive, not a walk. The rail commute to London takes over two hours. If you're commuting to the capital regularly, the numbers only work if your employer is covering the costs or you're working from home most of the week — and 35% of residents here already do.
Similar cities to Huntingdonshire
Cities with the closest profile to Huntingdonshire on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in Huntingdonshire
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.
- Huntingdonshire 013C
- Huntingdonshire 012B
- Huntingdonshire 006E
- Huntingdonshire 008B
- Huntingdonshire 012A
- Huntingdonshire 012F
- Huntingdonshire 014D
- Huntingdonshire 013A
- Huntingdonshire 003C
- Huntingdonshire 021G
- Huntingdonshire 018C
- Huntingdonshire 008A
- Huntingdonshire 019A
- Huntingdonshire 018F
- Huntingdonshire 013D
- Huntingdonshire 006B
- Huntingdonshire 008E
- Huntingdonshire 011C
- Huntingdonshire 012C
- Huntingdonshire 008D
Showing 20 of 111 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.