Living in Horsham
16 neighbourhoods · 89 sub-areasHorsham, in West Sussex, is a prosperous market town of around 151,500 people sitting roughly halfway between London and the South Coast. Renting here isn't cheap — a 2-bed runs about £1,320 a month, above the national average — but you're buying into low crime, good greenspace, and a very settled, family-oriented community.
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Rent runs at £1,447 a month — 32% above the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 2.5× safer than the national average.
1 primary school within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 1 secondary within a 4 km bus catchment, 33% Outstanding.
Weak transport links — 37/100; nearest rail station is around 2062 m away; 4 bus stops within five minutes' walk; London is reachable in 88 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: high owner-occupation (74%).
Living in Horsham
Horsham has the feel of a well-heeled market town that happens to be within commuting range of London. The centre is compact and walkable, with independent shops alongside the usual chains, and the surrounding countryside makes it genuinely attractive for anyone who wants open space without giving up on decent amenities. It's not a city, and it doesn't pretend to be — the population skews older and more settled than most South East towns, and that shapes the whole atmosphere.
The renter base here is smaller than you'd expect. Nearly three-quarters of homes are owner-occupied, so private renters — at around 14.5% of households — are a minority. That means less of the transient graduate-flat-share energy you'd get in Brighton or Crawley, and more long-term renters: families in three-beds, older couples downsizing, and some professionals who moved here for the schools and greenspace. If you're in your early 20s looking for nightlife and a flat-share scene, this probably isn't the right fit.
A 2-bed flat costs around £1,320 a month; a 3-bed pushes to about £1,660. That's above the UK median for a 2-bed but lower than you'd pay in parts of Surrey or along the coast. Council tax (Band D) runs to £2,441 a year — roughly £203 a month on top of rent. At current rents and local salaries, you'd spend around 62% of take-home pay on a typical 2-bed, which is tight, and it takes roughly six and a half years to save a deposit on the median house price of £466,000.
The honest trade-off: Horsham is expensive relative to local wages, and the rail commute into London takes well over an hour and a half by public transport — so if your job's in the capital, you're committing to a long daily haul. What you get in return is low crime, good greenspace within walking distance, and one of the more comfortable mid-sized towns in the South East.
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All areas in Horsham
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.
- Horsham 004E
- Horsham 006F
- Horsham 001A
- Horsham 006D
- Horsham 006C
- Horsham 003E
- Horsham 004B
- Horsham 007C
- Horsham 010A
- Horsham 016D
- Horsham 010B
- Horsham 007G
- Horsham 004D
- Horsham 002A
- Horsham 008E
- Horsham 006G
- Horsham 013E
- Horsham 013B
- Horsham 014D
- Horsham 006B
Showing 20 of 89 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.