Living in South Norfolk
16 neighbourhoods · 87 sub-areasSouth Norfolk is a largely rural district of around 147,000 people in the East of England, and one of the more affordable corners of the region for renters. A typical two-bedroom home runs about £878 a month — noticeably below the UK median for a 2-bed, and well under half what you'd pay in central London. The trade-off is that you're a long way from anywhere big.
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Rent runs at £971 a month — 12% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 2.9× safer than the national average.
1 primary school within a 1.5 km walk, 75% Good or better; 1 secondary within a 4 km bus catchment, 100% Good or better.
Weak transport links — 4/100; nearest rail station is around 6107 m away; 2 bus stops within five minutes' walk; London is reachable in 179 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: older population (26% aged 65+), high owner-occupation (76%).
Living in South Norfolk
South Norfolk covers a wide sweep of market towns, villages and farmland to the south of Norwich. It's quiet, genuinely green — the average resident is under 710 metres from open greenspace — and very much car country. Over half of residents drive to work, and public transport barely registers. If you want urban energy, this isn't it. But if you want space, low crime and relatively affordable housing, it delivers.
The population skews older than most of England. Nearly a quarter of residents are over 65, and the largest single age band is 50–64. Families are well represented too — couples with children make up a fifth of households. Younger renters are a minority here; the private rental market is thin, with only around 14% of homes privately rented. Most people own their homes — nearly three in four — which gives the area a settled, established feel.
Rents are genuinely competitive. A one-bedroom place runs around £687 a month, a two-bed around £878, and a three-bed around £1,092. Council tax (Band D) comes to about £2,483 a year — roughly £207 a month — which is on the higher side for a rural district, so factor that into your budget. Median resident salaries sit at around £32,900 a year, which makes South Norfolk's rents manageable relative to take-home pay — though rent still accounts for close to 46% of typical take-home, so it's not as comfortable as the headline figures suggest.
The honest catch is isolation. There's no metro service anywhere near — the nearest is over 120 km away — and the nearest mainline rail station is roughly 6.3 km in a straight line from the typical address. The rail journey to London takes around three hours. If you work remotely, that's fine — nearly a third of residents already work from home. But if you need to commute regularly to a major city, South Norfolk will test your patience and your fuel bill.
Similar cities to South Norfolk
Cities with the closest profile to South Norfolk on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in South Norfolk
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.
- South Norfolk 015H
- South Norfolk 015D
- South Norfolk 003D
- South Norfolk 017D
- South Norfolk 015G
- South Norfolk 002A
- South Norfolk 013D
- South Norfolk 016B
- South Norfolk 011D
- South Norfolk 016C
- South Norfolk 003C
- South Norfolk 005A
- South Norfolk 002C
- South Norfolk 011F
- South Norfolk 009C
- South Norfolk 015F
- South Norfolk 006D
- South Norfolk 004D
- South Norfolk 008C
- South Norfolk 011C
Showing 20 of 87 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.