Greenford Ravenor Park
Ealing 014 · 5 sub-areas · 8,730 residents
Ealing 014 is a residential stretch of the London borough of Ealing, home to around 8,730 people. A typical two-bedroom flat lets for about £1,976 a month — noticeably below the inner-London norm but still well above the UK average of around £1,200. Owner-occupation runs unusually high at 64%, and greenspace is within a short walk for more than four in five residents.
Greenford Ravenor Park is a commuter neighbourhood within Ealing — train into London runs in around 25 minutes, and the rhythm of weekday mornings is shaped by it.
Overview
What's it like to live in Greenford Ravenor Park?
Day-to-day life sits close to greenery — a park or playing field is within easy walking distance of most addresses; Crime sits around the national average — neither a notable concern nor a notable selling point; rents sit firmly in the upper bracket nationally, with a typical home letting at around £2,051 a month; gigabit broadband is effectively universal.
Generated from the latest May 2026 data · refreshed automatically
Figures are aggregated across 5 sub-areas — population-weighted means for rates, sums for counts. Sources cited beneath each section.
Greenford Ravenor Park in Ealing
Living in Greenford Ravenor Park
Ealing 014 sits within a part of Ealing that leans heavily residential — the kind of area where families settle rather than pass through. Over 64% of households own their home, which is a high share for Greater London, and the neighbourhood has a genuinely even age spread: roughly a fifth of residents in each of the under-18, 18–34, 35–49 and 50–64 brackets. That balance shapes the feel of the place — it's not dominated by students or young renters, and it's not exclusively retired either.
On costs, you're looking at a median rent of around £2,051 a month across all home sizes. That's meaningfully below what you'd pay in central or inner-east London, but it's not cheap by any objective standard. Rents here have risen modestly — up less than 1% year-on-year — which is a more stable picture than much of the capital. The bigger challenge is purchase prices: the median home costs around £531,000, and at current incomes it takes an estimated 7.4 years just to save a deposit.
The ethnic diversity index sits at 63, and just over 43% of residents were born in the UK — figures that reflect Ealing's wider reputation as one of London's more cosmopolitan boroughs. The degree-holder share of around 34% is solid but not exceptionally high by London standards, pointing to a community that's mixed professionally rather than concentrated in graduate-heavy sectors.
Practically, the nearest rail station is a little over 2 km away — roughly a 25-minute walk or a short bus ride — and public transport gets you into the nearest major employment hub in about 25 minutes. Around 44% of residents commute by car, which is higher than you'd expect closer to central London, and nearly a quarter work from home. For greenspace, most residents are within easy reach: 81% live within a walkable distance of a park or green area, and the average distance to the nearest greenspace is under 200 metres. See the streets and sub-areas below for more detail on which pockets of the neighbourhood suit different needs.
What you'll need on day one
Compare Greenford Ravenor Park with
Frequently asked
- Is Ealing 014 a nice place to live?
- It's a settled, family-oriented part of Ealing with good greenspace access — over 81% of residents are within walking distance of a park — and crime running below the national average. Owner-occupation is high at 64%, which tends to reflect a stable community. It's not cheap, but it's more affordable than most of inner London.
- What is the rent in Ealing 014?
- A one-bedroom flat runs around £1,583 a month, a two-bedroom about £1,976, and a three-bedroom roughly £2,336. The overall median is around £2,051. Rents rose less than 1% year-on-year, making this one of the more stable rental markets in Greater London. Note these are estimates scaled from borough-level data using local sale prices.
- Is Ealing 014 safe?
- The crime rate here is around 67.6 incidents per 1,000 residents a year, which is below the UK national average of roughly 80 per 1,000. That makes it relatively safe by London standards. The area has moderate deprivation overall, so conditions vary across the neighbourhood, but the headline crime figure is reassuring.
- What's the commute from Ealing 014 to central London?
- By public transport, you're looking at around 25 minutes to the nearest major employment hub. The nearest mainline rail station is about 2 km away — roughly a 25-minute walk or a short bus ride. Around 44% of residents drive, suggesting public transport connections are decent but not so fast that everyone abandons their car.
- Who lives in Ealing 014?
- A broadly mixed community — unusually even across age groups, with roughly a fifth of residents in each bracket from under-18 to 50–64. Over 64% own their home, suggesting long-term, settled residents. With only 43.8% UK-born, it's an internationally diverse area, reflecting Ealing's wider demographic character.
- What schools are near Ealing 014?
- There are 126 schools within 2 km, so options are plentiful. However, only around 22% of those nearby are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted — well below the national average of about 89%. The nearest Outstanding school is approximately 1.4 km away. It's worth checking individual catchments and inspection reports carefully before choosing an address.
- What's the council tax in Ealing 014?
- Council tax for a Band D property runs to about £2,139 a year — that's roughly £178 a month. This is the full charge; single-person households qualify for a 25% discount, bringing it down to around £1,604 annually.