Placetrics
District in Devon

Living in Teignbridge

19 neighbourhoods · 86 sub-areas

Teignbridge, in Devon's South West, is a mostly rural district of around 138,500 people where renting is noticeably cheaper than the national average. A two-bed goes for about £854 a month — well under the UK median — but nearly three in five residents drive to work, and rail connections to major cities are limited.

Verdict
Stands out for
  • low crime (top quarter nationally)
Watch out for
  • long commute to a major hub (bottom quarter nationally)
Crime / 1k / yr
85/ 100
45.8
Top quarter nationally · 2.2× safer than nat.
Good schools
37/ 100
88%
Below average
Commute to hub
19/ 100
115 min
Bottom quarter nationally
Jobs density
25/ 100
0.36
Below average
2-bed rent
60/ 100
£854/mo
Better than most · 1-bed £643 · 3-bed £1,066 · +4.5% YoY
Council tax
18/ 100
£2,561/yr
£213/mo

Overview

Overview

Living in Teignbridge

Teignbridge covers a wide stretch of Devon between Dartmoor and the Jurassic Coast — small market towns, coastal villages, and a lot of countryside in between. It's not a place people move to for career acceleration; it's a place people move to for quality of life. The population skews older than the UK average, and over seven in ten households own their home.

The renter base is smaller than in most urban areas — only around 17% of homes are privately rented. You'll find a mix of younger people in the market towns like Newton Abbot and Dawlish, and older couples or retirees in the coastal and rural fringes. There's no dominant student population pulling the demographics in any particular direction.

Rents are genuinely affordable by national standards. A two-bed runs about £854 a month and a one-bed around £643 — well below the UK median of around £1,200 for a two-bed. That said, property prices are high relative to local wages: the median home costs around £316,000 and the typical resident earns about £28,900 a year, so saving a deposit still takes around five and a half years even with lower rents. Council tax at Band D runs about £2,643 a year, or roughly £220 a month.

The honest trade-off is connectivity. The rail commute to London takes over three hours by public transport, and with only around 3% of residents using public transport to get to work, you'll almost certainly need a car. Rents have also been rising — up around 4.5% in the past year — so the affordability advantage could narrow further.

LLM-summarised from ONS, MHCLG, DfT, Police.uk and Land Registry data.

Peers

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All sub-areas

All sub-areas in Teignbridge

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.