New York
North Tyneside 015 · 4 sub-areas · 6,681 residents
New York is a green, lower-density part of North Tyneside — parks within walking distance of most addresses, a slower weekday rhythm, and a population skewed toward longer-tenure households rather than transient renters. The demographic profile leans family-aged, with a clear share of households with school-age children.
Overview
What's it like to live in New York?
2 parks and 2 playgrounds are within five minutes' walk, so greenspace is reliably close at hand; Crime sits around the national average — neither a notable concern nor a notable selling point; Public transport is genuinely strong; most errands and a fair share of social life don't need a car; rents are below the national norm, with a typical home letting at around £830 a month; gigabit broadband is effectively universal.
Generated from the latest May 2026 data · refreshed automatically
Figures are aggregated across 4 sub-areas — population-weighted means for rates, sums for counts. Sources cited beneath each section.
New York in North Tyneside
What you'll need on day one
Frequently asked
- What's the median rent in New York?
- The median monthly rent across New York is £830.
- How safe is New York?
- New York has a safety score of — out of 100, where higher is safer. The score is the national percentile rank of police-recorded crimes per 1,000 residents per year, inverted.
- How well-connected is New York?
- Transport score: — out of 100. Combines walking time to the nearest rail station, walking time to the nearest metro stop, and public-transport time to clusters with 5,000+ jobs. The nearest rail station is roughly 85 minutes' walk.
- What schools are near New York?
- There are 13 schools within 2 km of New York, of which 39% are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted. The nearest Outstanding-rated school is approximately 779 m away.
- What is the council tax band in New York?
- The most common council tax band in New York is A, with the typical Band D annual charge around £1,736. Council tax is set by North Tyneside council and applies to every property in the area.
- How long is the commute from New York to London?
- By the fastest direct train, the journey from New York to central London is approximately 264 minutes. This is the fastest no-change rail journey from the local area centroid; door-to-door times will vary with walking time to the station.
- Is gigabit broadband available in New York?
- 100% of premises in New York are gigabit-capable according to Ofcom Connected Nations 2025. Most properties can already buy gigabit packages.
- What is the deprivation rank of New York?
- New York sits in IMD decile 3 of 10, where 1 is the most deprived 10% of local areas nationally and 10 is the least deprived. The Index of Multiple Deprivation combines income, employment, education, health, crime, barriers and environment.
- What's the tenure mix in New York?
- 52% of households in New York are owner-occupied. The remainder is split between private renting and social housing — see the Demographics section for the full breakdown from Census 2021.
- What is the average property price in New York?
- The average property price across North Tyneside (the local authority covering New York) is approximately £197,263, per HM Land Registry's House Price Index. Per-local area prices vary; see the cost-of-living section for medians by property type.
- Is New York a commuter town or workplace hub?
- Commuter town — most working residents travel out for work. (0.42 jobs per working-age resident. Median resident salary £31,106.)
- Which local areas are part of New York?
- New York contains 4 local areas: North Tyneside 015B, North Tyneside 015C, North Tyneside 015A, North Tyneside 015D.
Frequently asked about New York
Short answers anchored in the data above. Each link goes to the relevant section or methodology page.
- What is the average rent in New York?
- The estimated median monthly rent in New York is £830. This is derived from the council-area ONS rental figure scaled by the local sale-price gradient — see the Cost section for the breakdown by bedroom count and the affordability ratio against local salaries.
- Is New York a safe place to live?
- New York has a safety score of 42/100. The score is the national percentile rank of police-recorded crime per 1,000 residents, inverted so 100 is the safest 1% of England + Wales. The Safety section below shows the breakdown by category.
- What schools are near New York?
- 39% of schools within 2 km of New York are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted. The Schools section lists individual schools with inspection ratings.
- How long is the commute from New York?
- Public-transport commute time from New York to central London is approximately 264 minutes. The Transport section has commute times to every major UK city hub.
- How is New York different from the rest of North Tyneside?
- New York contains 4 sub-areas. The "Sub-areas" section below lets you drill into each one individually — they often vary by 20%+ on rent and demographics within the same neighbourhood.
- Where does New York rank in North Tyneside?
- New York scores 97/100 on our composite liveability index. To see how it stacks up against every other neighbourhood in North Tyneside, see the Cities table on the North Tyneside page.