Living in Chichester
14 neighbourhoods · 75 sub-areasChichester, with around 128,900 people, sits in the South East and carries South East prices to match. You'll pay about £1,209 a month for a typical two-bedroom home — close to the UK median, but salaries here are well below regional norms, which makes affordability the real story. It's a beautiful, historic city with a relaxed pace, but London is a long way off.
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Rent runs at £1,321 a month — 20% above the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 47% below the national average.
1 primary school within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 1 secondary within a 4 km bus catchment, 50% Outstanding.
Weak transport links — 24/100; nearest rail station is around 4397 m away; 4 bus stops within five minutes' walk; London is reachable in 139 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 snapshot: older population (28% aged 65+).
Living in Chichester
Chichester is one of the more distinctive places to live in the South East — a cathedral city with Roman walls, independent shops, and a genuinely unhurried feel. The population skews noticeably older than most UK cities: more than a quarter of residents are over 65, and the working-age renter base is a relatively small slice. That shapes the whole character of the place — quieter, more settled, less transient than somewhere like Brighton or Portsmouth.
The renter base is spread across owner-occupiers who've downscaled, professionals working locally in health and public services, and a modest share of younger renters. Around 18% of homes are privately rented, which is below the South East average. There's no single obvious renter cluster, but the city-centre neighbourhoods — Chichester 001 through to Chichester 005 — are where most private lettings sit. Families with children tend to look at the outer areas where three-bedroom homes are more available.
A 2-bed flat runs around £1,209 a month, and a 3-bed climbs to about £1,490. Council tax (Band D) comes to roughly £2,470 a year — around £206 a month — which is a meaningful extra cost on top of rent. With a median local salary of around £28,600, renters here are spending a very high share of take-home pay on housing. The deposit clock is slow too: around 8.5 years to save a typical deposit at current prices.
The honest trade-off is this: Chichester offers quality of life that's hard to argue with, but the numbers are stretched. The rail commute to London runs to around 2.5 hours by public transport, so it isn't a practical commuter base. If you work locally or from home — and 34% of residents do work from home — it makes much more sense.
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All areas in Chichester
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.
- Chichester 010C
- Chichester 010D
- Chichester 008C
- Chichester 010E
- Chichester 008F
- Chichester 008H
- Chichester 009C
- Chichester 008B
- Chichester 004G
- Chichester 012B
- Chichester 006A
- Chichester 008A
- Chichester 010B
- Chichester 009D
- Chichester 010A
- Chichester 011B
- Chichester 011C
- Chichester 012F
- Chichester 012A
- Chichester 008G