Living in Wiltshire
64 neighbourhoods · 307 sub-areasWiltshire, with around 523,700 people spread across a largely rural county in the South West, is one of the more affordable corners of southern England. A 2-bed typically runs about £950 a month — well below the national median and a fraction of what you'd pay in London. The trade-off is a car-dependent lifestyle and a rail commute to London that takes well over two hours.
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Rent runs at £1,058 a month — broadly in line with the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 2.2× safer than 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 — 21/100; nearest rail station is around 4513 m away; 4 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Bristol is reachable in 110 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 (70%).
Living in Wiltshire
Wiltshire's a wide, green county — market towns, villages and military bases rather than a single dominant city. There's no urban core in the way Bristol or Bath provides one; instead, you get a patchwork of places like Salisbury, Chippenham, Trowbridge and Swindon's fringes. That spread suits people who want space and quiet, but it means public transport is essentially irrelevant for most daily journeys — over half of residents drive to work.
The renter base is more mixed than you'd expect from a county this rural. Around 18% of homes are privately rented — below the national average — and two-thirds of residents own their home. Families and older households dominate; the 50-plus age groups make up over 40% of the population. Young professionals do live here, often in the larger market towns, but this isn't a county that pulls in graduates the way Bristol or Bath does.
On costs, a 2-bed runs about £950 a month, and a 3-bed around £1,190. That's genuinely competitive for the South West, though rents rose around 7% in the past year. Council tax (Band D) comes to roughly £2,570 a year — about £214 a month — which is on the higher side. The median property price is around £354,000, and the typical renter needs about five and a half years to save a deposit.
The honest catch is connectivity. The nearest mainline rail station averages nearly 5.5 km away as the crow flies — roughly a 70-minute walk or a drive. Public transport is used by barely 2% of residents for commuting. If you don't drive, or if you need to be in London regularly, Wiltshire will feel isolated fast.
Similar cities to Wiltshire
Cities with the closest profile to Wiltshire on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in Wiltshire
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.
- Wiltshire 058C
- Wiltshire 031D
- Wiltshire 007D
- Wiltshire 056A
- Wiltshire 048C
- Wiltshire 055D
- Wiltshire 064D
- Wiltshire 055C
- Wiltshire 059D
- Wiltshire 066C
- Wiltshire 035C
- Wiltshire 056C
- Wiltshire 064B
- Wiltshire 014E
- Wiltshire 056D
- Wiltshire 015D
- Wiltshire 031C
- Wiltshire 044A
- Wiltshire 036B
- Wiltshire 045B
Showing 20 of 307 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.