Living in Gateshead
27 neighbourhoods · 126 sub-areasGateshead, with around 202,000 people on the south bank of the Tyne, is one of the most affordable places to rent in the North East. A typical 2-bed flat runs about £700 a month — well under half what you'd pay in central London and noticeably below the UK national average.
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Rent runs at £787 a month — 28% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 21% below the national average.
6 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 6 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 67% Good or better.
Moderate transport links — 63/100; nearest rail station is around 2102 m away; 16 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Edinburgh is reachable in 114 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 demographic profile.
Living in Gateshead
Gateshead sits directly across the Tyne from Newcastle, and the two effectively function as one city. The centre has the Sage, the Baltic arts centre, and the Millennium Bridge — real anchors — but most of Gateshead is residential and working-class in character, with a mix of post-war housing estates, interwar terraces, and a growing number of new-build flats near the quayside. It's the kind of place where your rent is genuinely low without feeling like you've sacrificed urban life.
The renter base here skews slightly older than the typical university city. Around a fifth of residents are 18–34, but there's a strong contingent of over-50s too — the age split is fairly even across the bands. Private renting accounts for only around 17% of homes, which is low; more than a quarter of households are in social housing, and nearly 58% own their home. If you're renting privately, you're in a minority here, which can shape the feel of neighbourhoods.
A 2-bed flat runs about £700 a month, and a 1-bed averages around £580. Three-beds come in around £820. Council tax at Band D is about £2,716 a year — roughly £226 a month — which is on the higher side for a low-rent area. The deposit picture is good though: typical buyers save a deposit in under three years. Rents have risen about 5.5% in the past year, so the affordability window is narrowing slightly.
The honest trade-off is this: Gateshead isn't its own jobs market. Only around 95,000 jobs are based here, and at 0.5 jobs per working-age resident, most people commute — predominantly by car, with just over half of residents driving to work. If you're relying on public transport, options are more limited than nearby Newcastle, and just 11% of residents use it to commute.
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Cities with the closest profile to Gateshead on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in Gateshead
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.
- Gateshead 008F
- Gateshead 010A
- Gateshead 010B
- Gateshead 010C
- Gateshead 028B
- Gateshead 027A
- Gateshead 027B
- Gateshead 008C
- Gateshead 028A
- Gateshead 007C
- Gateshead 007A
- Gateshead 008A
- Gateshead 010D
- Gateshead 016E
- Gateshead 020C
- Gateshead 013D
- Gateshead 004A
- Gateshead 003D
- Gateshead 027C
- Gateshead 026D
Showing 20 of 126 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.