Living in Somerset
71 neighbourhoods · 339 sub-areasSomerset covers a wide sweep of the South West — around 588,000 people across market towns, coastal villages and rural hinterland. Renting here is noticeably cheaper than most of England: a 2-bed runs about £880 a month, well under the UK median. The trade-off is that you'll almost certainly need a car, and major cities are a long way off.
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Rent runs at £983 a month — 11% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 37% below the national average.
2 primary schools 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 — 17/100; nearest rail station is around 4845 m away; Bristol is reachable in 120 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 (26% aged 65+), high owner-occupation (71%).
Living in Somerset
Somerset isn't a city — it's a county-sized unitary authority, and that shapes everything about what it's like to live here. Think market towns like Taunton and Bridgwater, small coastal spots, and a lot of countryside in between. It suits people who actively want that pace: older households, families who've traded commutes for space, and remote workers who can work from anywhere. If you need to be in a major city most days, it's a harder sell.
The renter base skews older than most English areas — nearly a quarter of residents are over 65, and the largest single age group is 50–64. Young professionals are a smaller share than in comparable English counties. Around 68% of homes are owner-occupied, so the private rental market is relatively thin at about 17.5% of housing stock. You'll mostly be living near settled families and established couples rather than a young transient population.
A 2-bed costs around £880 a month in Somerset, and a 3-bed runs about £1,090. Council tax (Band D) comes to roughly £2,560 a year — around £213 a month — which is worth factoring into your budget. The median house price sits at just over £307,000, and the data suggests you'd need around five years to save a deposit on a typical salary. Rents absorbed around half of take-home pay for the median renter — that's stretched even at these relatively modest rent levels, because local wages are low.
The honest catch: public transport is almost non-existent for practical purposes. Only about 1.6% of residents commute by public transport, and 58% drive. The rail network is sparse — the nearest mainline station is roughly 7 km away for a typical resident, which is over an hour's walk or a necessary car journey. If you're commuting to London by rail it's pushing three and a half hours each way. This is genuinely rural England, and it works best if you're already set up for that.
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All areas in Somerset
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.
- Mendip 004B
- Sedgemoor 009E
- Mendip 004A
- Mendip 009A
- Sedgemoor 004C
- Somerset West and Taunton 015C
- Somerset West and Taunton 011A
- Somerset West and Taunton 011D
- South Somerset 015C
- South Somerset 015A
- Sedgemoor 011A
- Somerset West and Taunton 011B
- Sedgemoor 009B
- Somerset West and Taunton 011F
- Sedgemoor 009D
- South Somerset 005D
- South Somerset 016A
- Somerset West and Taunton 001B
- South Somerset 023D
- South Somerset 011F
Showing 20 of 339 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.