Aldershot Manor Park
Rushmoor 011 · 4 sub-areas · 6,806 residents
Rushmoor 011 is a residential pocket of Rushmoor in the South East, home to around 6,800 people. A typical two-bedroom flat lets for about £1,255 a month — close to the UK median for a 2-bed and markedly more affordable than much of the wider South East. Over three-quarters of households own their home, giving it a distinctly settled, owner-occupier character.
Aldershot Manor Park is a mid-density neighbourhood of Rushmoor in the South East region. It sits between busier and quieter parts of the local authority and isn't dominated by a single use — there's a mix of workplaces, housing and local services. Most homes are owner-occupied, so turnover is low and many residents have been here a long time.
Overview
What's it like to live in Aldershot Manor Park?
2 parks and 1 playgrounds are within five minutes' walk, so greenspace is reliably close at hand; food and drink within walking distance is workable but not dense — around 13 restaurants and 2 pubs in five minutes; The streets feel safe by national standards — police-recorded crime is well below the country-wide median; Public transport is genuinely strong; most errands and a fair share of social life don't need a car; rents are roughly in line with the national norm, at around £1,369 a month for a typical home; 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.
Aldershot Manor Park in Rushmoor
Living in Aldershot Manor Park
Rushmoor 011 sits within the borough of Rushmoor and has the feel of a predominantly owner-occupied suburb: streets of family homes, relatively low rental turnover, and a population spread fairly evenly across age groups. Around 69% of residents are within a short walk of green space, and the nearest open space is only about 240 metres away on average — a meaningful plus for families and those who want daily outdoor access without driving anywhere.
On cost, this part of Rushmoor is notably more affordable than much of the South East corridor. A typical 2-bed runs about £1,255 a month — roughly in line with the UK national median — while a 3-bed steps up to around £1,513. Rents have been rising at 7.5% year-on-year, which is a real pressure, but the starting point remains well below what you'd pay closer to London. The median property price of around £399,000 means the deposit hurdle is real — you're looking at roughly six years of saving on a typical local salary.
Who lives here skews settled rather than transient. Over 76% of households own their home, and the private rental sector accounts for fewer than one in five. The population is fairly evenly spread across age brackets — roughly a fifth each in the under-18, 18–34, 35–49, and 50–64 groups — which gives the area a broad community feel rather than one dominated by a single life stage. Around a third of residents hold a degree-level qualification.
Practically, the nearest mainline rail station is about 720 metres away — roughly a nine-minute walk — and the public transport commute to London takes around 52 minutes. That London link is the area's main connectivity story: over half of residents commute by car, and public transport use is low at under 5%, which tells you this is a place most people drive from. Broadband is full gigabit across the whole area, which at least means working from home — a pattern for 31% of residents — is seamless. See the streets and sub-areas below for more.
What you'll need on day one
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Frequently asked
- Is Rushmoor 011 a nice place to live?
- For owner-occupiers and families, it works well — over three-quarters of households own their home, green space is within easy walking distance, and crime sits well below the national average. The trade-off is that rents consume a high share of take-home pay (nearly 64%), and Ofsted ratings for nearby schools are lower than you'd hope, with only around 21% of local schools rated Good or Outstanding.
- What is the rent in Rushmoor 011?
- A one-bedroom flat runs about £968 a month, a two-bed around £1,255, and a three-bed roughly £1,513. These are estimated figures based on local sale prices scaled from council-level rental data. Rents rose around 7.5% year-on-year, so availability at those prices is tightening.
- Is Rushmoor 011 safe?
- Relatively, yes. The crime rate is around 58.6 incidents per 1,000 residents a year — noticeably below the UK national rate of roughly 80 per 1,000. The area also sits in the least deprived fifth of neighbourhoods nationally, which tends to correlate with lower crime levels.
- What's the commute from Rushmoor 011 to London?
- The public transport commute to London takes around 52 minutes. The nearest mainline rail station is about 720 metres away — roughly a nine-minute walk. That said, most residents drive rather than take public transport, so the rail link is more relevant for occasional London trips than a daily commute for most.
- Who lives in Rushmoor 011?
- Mostly settled owner-occupiers. Over 76% of households own their home and the population is spread fairly evenly across age groups, with the 50–64 bracket the largest at around 22%. About a third of residents hold degree-level qualifications, and 31% work from home — pointing to a professional, rooted community rather than a transient one.
- What schools are near Rushmoor 011?
- There are 53 schools within 2km of typical residents — a large catchment. Around 21% are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted, which is well below the national average. The nearest Outstanding-rated school is about 605 metres away. Check individual school catchment boundaries directly, as proximity alone doesn't guarantee a place.