Living in East Devon
21 neighbourhoods · 88 sub-areasEast Devon is a largely rural district of around 158,000 people on the South West coast, and one of the pricier corners of Devon for what you get. A 2-bed runs about £880 a month — below the UK median but steep relative to local wages, and property prices push a median of nearly £374,000, making ownership a long stretch for most renters.
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Rent runs at £962 a month — 13% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 2.6× 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, 100% Good or better.
Weak transport links — 22/100; nearest rail station is around 3046 m away; 1.5 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Bristol is reachable in 144 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 (29% aged 65+), high owner-occupation (74%).
Living in East Devon
East Devon stretches from the Jurassic Coast cliffs to the market towns of Honiton and Axminster, with Exmouth and Sidmouth as the main coastal centres. It's a place that draws retirees and second-home buyers as much as working families — around 29% of residents are over 65, one of the highest shares in the South West. The landscape is genuinely beautiful, greenspace is practically on your doorstep (the average resident lives within 450 metres of it), and the pace of life is slower than any nearby city. If that's what you're after, East Devon delivers.
Most renters here are families, older professionals, or people who've made a deliberate choice to leave city life behind. Around 72% of homes are owner-occupied, which means the private rental market is relatively thin — only about 16% of properties are privately rented. Young professionals in their 20s and early 30s are a small share of the population; at 16%, the 18–34 age group is noticeably under-represented. The towns of Exmouth and Sidmouth attract the broadest mix of renters; smaller settlements are more owner-occupier dominated.
Rents are moderate in absolute terms — a 1-bed averages around £670 a month, a 2-bed around £880, and a 3-bed around £1,100. But pair those figures with a median resident salary of just over £32,000 a year and the maths tightens fast: rent typically takes up close to half of take-home pay. Council tax (Band D) runs about £2,600 a year — roughly £215 a month on top of rent — and saving a deposit on the median house price of nearly £374,000 takes close to six years even on a disciplined savings rate.
The honest trade-off is this: East Devon is beautiful, quiet, and relatively safe, but it's not set up for people who need a fast commute, high salaries, or a deep rental market. Over half of residents commute by car, public transport use is minimal at just 2.5%, and nearly 30% work from home — which tells you something about who can afford to live here.
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All areas in East Devon
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.
- East Devon 019A
- East Devon 019D
- East Devon 019C
- East Devon 012A
- East Devon 010B
- East Devon 016A
- East Devon 002A
- East Devon 015C
- East Devon 005B
- East Devon 022C
- East Devon 014C
- East Devon 020A
- East Devon 019B
- East Devon 008E
- East Devon 003B
- East Devon 009A
- East Devon 021A
- East Devon 002C
- East Devon 021B
- East Devon 002B
Showing 20 of 88 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.