Living in South Tyneside
23 neighbourhoods · 103 sub-areasSouth Tyneside, with around 151,000 people on the south bank of the River Tyne, is one of the most affordable places to rent in England. A typical 2-bed flat goes for about £627 a month — roughly half the UK average — and you can save a deposit in under three years. The trade-off is limited local jobs and a long journey south.
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Rent runs at £722 a month — 34% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 22% below the national average.
7 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 6 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 100% Good or better.
Strong transport links — 76/100; nearest rail station is around 2627 m away; 14 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Leeds is reachable in 129 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 South Tyneside
South Tyneside covers the stretch of river bank running east from Gateshead to the North Sea — Jarrow, Hebburn, South Shields and the coast. It's a compact, predominantly residential borough with a tight community feel, strong social housing stock, and greenspace closer than most UK towns manage. Just under 57% of residents own their home, which shapes the local rental market: private renting is relatively small at around 13% of households, and social housing accounts for nearly 30%.
The renter base skews toward lower-to-middle incomes. Young professionals who want access to the wider Tyne and Wear area tend to use the Tyne and Wear Metro — the nearest stop is typically around 1.1 km away — to reach Newcastle for work. Families are a noticeable presence: nearly one in five residents is under 18, higher than most urban areas. Older residents are significant too, with over 20% aged 65 or above.
What you pay depends on what you need. A 1-bed runs around £505 a month, a 2-bed about £627, and a 3-bed roughly £751. Council tax for a Band D property is about £2,434 a year — just over £200 a month. That's the monthly rent picture, which makes South Tyneside one of the most genuinely affordable urban councils in the country. Rent takes up about 37% of typical take-home pay here, which is high relative to local wages but low in absolute terms.
The honest trade-off is jobs. Only around 41,000 jobs are physically based in the borough — about 0.3 jobs per working-age resident — and the median workplace salary is £25,490, noticeably below what residents actually earn (£28,784), which tells you most people with better-paid jobs commute out. If you work locally, options are limited; health and social care accounts for 16% of all jobs here.
Similar cities to South Tyneside
Cities with the closest profile to South Tyneside on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in South Tyneside
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 Tyneside 011B
- South Tyneside 010B
- South Tyneside 009D
- South Tyneside 011C
- South Tyneside 009A
- South Tyneside 001D
- South Tyneside 002A
- South Tyneside 001A
- South Tyneside 005D
- South Tyneside 003B
- South Tyneside 001C
- South Tyneside 004D
- South Tyneside 002E
- South Tyneside 002D
- South Tyneside 021D
- South Tyneside 002C
- South Tyneside 002B
- South Tyneside 011D
- South Tyneside 001E
- South Tyneside 010A
Showing 20 of 103 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.