Living in Vale of Glamorgan
15 neighbourhoods · 82 sub-areasVale of Glamorgan, with around 135,000 people, sits just south of Cardiff and offers a genuinely different pace of life from the capital. You'll pay around £889 a month for a 2-bed — noticeably cheaper than the UK median — though rents have been climbing, up 7% in the past year alone.
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Rent runs at £984 a month — 11% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 45% below the national average.
no primary schools within a 1.5 km walk; no secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment.
Moderate transport links — 56/100; nearest rail station is around 1071 m away; 2 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Cardiff is reachable in 36 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 demographic profile.
Living in Vale of Glamorgan
Vale of Glamorgan covers a wide stretch of South Wales coastline and commuter belt, from the market town of Barry and the heritage town of Cowbridge through to the outskirts of Cardiff. It's not a single urban centre — it's a collection of towns, villages and coastal spots that suit people who want space and greenery without being hours from a city. Over half of residents are within a short walk of green space, and the coast adds something most commuter belts can't match.
The population skews older than most urban areas — over 40% are aged 50 or above, and nearly a fifth are retired. Couples with children make up a significant share of households, and owner-occupation is the norm here. Private renting is a smaller part of the housing mix than in Cardiff, which means less stock and more competition for decent rentals when they come up.
A 2-bed flat runs around £889 a month; a 3-bed house typically comes in around £994. That's below the UK median for both, but rent is eating up a big chunk of take-home pay — around 48% for a typical resident salary of roughly £31,400 a year. If you're buying, the median property price is around £319,000, and the average first-time buyer is saving for just over five years to reach a deposit.
The honest trade-off is transport. Only about 4% of residents commute by public transport, and over half drive to work. The nearest rail station is roughly 1.9 km away on average — around a 23-minute walk — and rail to London takes nearly two and a half hours. If you're not working locally or from home, you'll almost certainly need a car.
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All areas in Vale of Glamorgan
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.
- Vale of Glamorgan 007A
- Vale of Glamorgan 004E
- Vale of Glamorgan 008C
- Vale of Glamorgan 012A
- Vale of Glamorgan 009A
- Vale of Glamorgan 012F
- Vale of Glamorgan 004D
- Vale of Glamorgan 004B
- Vale of Glamorgan 008B
- Vale of Glamorgan 005D
- Vale of Glamorgan 009B
- Vale of Glamorgan 009E
- Vale of Glamorgan 005H
- Vale of Glamorgan 007D
- Vale of Glamorgan 009C
- Vale of Glamorgan 006B
- Vale of Glamorgan 005A
- Vale of Glamorgan 008E
- Vale of Glamorgan 013E
- Vale of Glamorgan 005C
Showing 20 of 82 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.