Clevedon South & Yeo
North Somerset 010 · 5 sub-areas · 7,702 residents
North Somerset 010 is a predominantly rural and suburban stretch within North Somerset, home to around 7,700 people. A typical two-bedroom home lets for about £1,065 a month — noticeably below the national median for a 2-bed — and over three-quarters of residents own their homes outright, making this one of the more settled, owner-occupied corners of the South West.
Clevedon South & Yeo is a mid-density neighbourhood of North Somerset in the South West 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 Clevedon South & Yeo?
2 parks and 3 playgrounds are within five minutes' walk, so greenspace is reliably close at hand; The streets feel safe by national standards — police-recorded crime is well below the country-wide median; Transport links are limited — a car or e-bike is a practical assumption for most regular trips; rents are roughly in line with the national norm, at around £1,194 a month for a typical home; gigabit broadband is effectively universal.
Generated from the latest May 2026 data · refreshed automatically
Figures are aggregated across 5 sub-areas — population-weighted means for rates, sums for counts. Sources cited beneath each section.
Clevedon South & Yeo in North Somerset
Living in Clevedon South & Yeo
This part of North Somerset sits firmly in owner-occupied, semi-rural territory. The area has a noticeably older age profile than most of the South West — around 43% of residents are aged 50 or over — and the pace here reflects that: quieter roads, lower density, and the kind of neighbourhood where people tend to stay rather than pass through.
Cost-wise, it's genuinely affordable relative to much of the South West. A two-bedroom home runs about £1,065 a month, and a three-bedroom costs around £1,326. Those figures sit below the national 2-bed median of roughly £1,200, which is rare this close to Bristol's commuter belt. The trade-off is a rent-to-take-home ratio of around 55%, which is still a stretch on a typical resident salary of just under £33,000 a year.
Owner-occupation dominates here — around 77% of homes are owned, with only 18% privately rented and 5% social housing. That shapes the community significantly: you'll find more families and settled couples than in the city's inner neighbourhoods, and the one-person household rate of 31% points to a fair number of older residents living independently.
Practically speaking, the area is car-dependent. Over 57% of residents drive to work, and just under 2% use public transport — the nearest mainline rail station is roughly 4.5 km away, so you'd drive or cycle. The nearest major UK employment centre is around 70 minutes away by road or public transport. Broadband is fully gigabit-enabled across the area, with no properties below the universal service obligation — strong infrastructure even in a rural setting. See the streets and sub-areas below for more.
What you'll need on day one
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Frequently asked
- Is North Somerset 010 a nice place to live?
- It's a quiet, settled area with low crime and good broadband, but you'll need a car for most daily tasks. Over three-quarters of residents own their homes, which gives it a stable community feel. It suits people who prioritise space and calm over urban convenience.
- What is the rent in North Somerset 010?
- A one-bedroom runs about £810 a month, a two-bedroom around £1,065, and a three-bedroom roughly £1,326. These are estimates scaled from council-level data using local sale prices. Two-bed rents are below the national median of around £1,200 — relatively good value for the South West.
- Is North Somerset 010 safe?
- Yes — the crime rate here is around 41 per 1,000 residents a year, roughly half the national average of approximately 80 per 1,000. It's a low-crime area by any reasonable benchmark, and the combination of low deprivation and high owner-occupation keeps antisocial behaviour low.
- What's the commute from North Somerset 010 to the nearest city centre?
- The area is car-dependent — only about 2% of residents commute by public transport. The nearest mainline rail station is around 4.5 km away, and the nearest major UK employment hub is roughly 70 minutes by road or public transport. Most residents drive.
- Who lives in North Somerset 010?
- Predominantly older, settled owner-occupiers. Around 43% of residents are aged 50 or over, and 77% own their homes. It's a largely UK-born, lower-diversity area with a significant share of one-person households — likely older residents living independently.
- What schools are near North Somerset 010?
- There are 21 schools within typical catchment distance, but only around 49% are rated Good or Outstanding — well below the national share of roughly 89%. The nearest Outstanding school is around 3.7 km away. Check North Somerset Council's admissions pages and Ofsted directly for current catchment maps.
- Is North Somerset 010 good for working from home?
- It's well set up for it. Broadband is fully gigabit-enabled across the area, with no properties below the minimum speed standard — that's 100% gigabit coverage. Around 30% of residents already work from home, reflecting both the infrastructure quality and the area's distance from major employment centres.