Odiham & Warnborough
Hart 011 · 4 sub-areas · 6,547 residents
Hart 011 is a quiet, largely residential part of Hart district in the South East, home to around 6,500 people. A typical two-bedroom home lets for about £1,295 a month — slightly above the UK median for a 2-bed, but a long way below most of the commuter belt closer to London. Nearly six in ten households own their home, which gives the area a distinctly settled feel.
Odiham & Warnborough is a settled residential pocket of Hart. The bigger gravitational centre is London, around 114 minutes away by direct train, but most days don't require leaving — local life is what people are here for. A high share of adults are degree-educated, which often shows up in the kind of jobs people commute to.
Overview
What's it like to live in Odiham & Warnborough?
2 parks and 1 playgrounds are within five minutes' walk, so greenspace is reliably close at hand; there's effectively nothing within walking distance — eating out, drinking and shopping mean a drive; The streets feel safe by national standards — police-recorded crime is well below the country-wide median; Transport links are limited — a car or e-bike is a practical assumption for most regular trips; rents are roughly in line with the national norm, at around £1,406 a month for a typical home.
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.
Odiham & Warnborough in Hart
Living in Odiham & Warnborough
Hart 011 sits in one of the least deprived parts of England — it scores in roughly the top 20% on the national deprivation index — and that shows in the feel of the place. Houses are large, greenspace is close (the nearest is under 600 metres away), and the streets are quiet. It's not a neighbourhood with a lot of visible urban energy; it's the kind of place people move to once they've decided they want calm over convenience.
On cost, it sits in an interesting middle ground. A two-bedroom home runs around £1,295 a month and a three-bedroom around £1,570 — noticeably cheaper than the stockbroker belt towns closer to the M25, but not a bargain by any stretch. House prices tell a starker story: the median sale price is just under £620,000, which means saving a deposit takes the average resident nearly eight years. Council tax (Band D) is £2,400 a year.
The population is spread fairly evenly across age groups — under-18s make up around one in five residents, and the 65-plus cohort is a similar share, which is higher than you'd expect in a more transient rental area. Owner-occupation at 58% confirms this is predominantly a settled community rather than a revolving-door rental market. Around a quarter of households rent privately. Degree-level qualifications are held by roughly 43% of residents — well above the national average — which reflects the professional commuter profile of much of Hart district.
The commute picture matters here. Nearly 39% of residents work from home — one of the higher shares you'll find anywhere — and only around 1% use public transport to get to work. Just over 40% drive. The nearest rail station is roughly 4.6 km away in a straight line, around a 57-minute walk or a short drive, which makes a car close to essential. See the streets and sub-areas below for more detail on specific pockets within Hart 011.
What you'll need on day one
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Frequently asked
- Is Hart 011 a nice place to live?
- For the right person, yes. It's quiet, low-crime, and sits in one of the least deprived parts of England. Greenspace is close and the area has a settled, community feel. The trade-off is that public transport is poor, a car is almost essential, and house prices are high — the median sale price is just under £620,000.
- What is the rent in Hart 011?
- A one-bedroom typically runs around £1,017 a month, a two-bedroom around £1,295, and a three-bedroom around £1,570. Rents rose roughly 4% over the past year. These are estimates scaled from district-level data using local sale prices, as official figures don't go below council level.
- Is Hart 011 safe?
- Yes — it records around 32.5 crimes per 1,000 residents a year, well below the UK national rate of roughly 80 per 1,000. Hart district is consistently one of the safer parts of England, and this neighbourhood reflects that. There are no significant crime hotspots flagged in the data.
- What's the commute from Hart 011 to London?
- By public transport it's around 109 minutes to London — a long haul for a daily commute. The nearest rail station is about 4.6 km away, so you'll need a car or taxi to get there first. Nearly 39% of residents work from home, which suggests many have structured their lives around avoiding the commute entirely.
- Who lives in Hart 011?
- Mostly settled owner-occupiers — around 58% own their home. The population skews professional and degree-educated (around 44% hold a degree), with a high proportion working from home. Age is spread fairly evenly, but the 65-plus share is higher than average, pointing to a long-established residential community rather than a transient rental area.
- What schools are near Hart 011?
- There are eight schools within typical catchment distance, but none are currently rated Good or Outstanding within 2km — which is unusual for an area with this level of affluence. The nearest Outstanding-rated school is just over 7.6 km away. Families should check current Ofsted ratings and individual catchment maps carefully before choosing a home here.
- How good is broadband in Hart 011?
- Reasonable but not exceptional. Around 45% of premises have access to gigabit-speed broadband, and no properties fall below the minimum universal service obligation speed. For a predominantly work-from-home area, faster rollout would help — but basic connectivity is reliable across the neighbourhood.