Living in Wrexham
18 neighbourhoods · 84 sub-areasWrexham, with around 138,000 people, is one of the most affordable places to rent in Wales. A typical two-bedroom home goes for about £700 a month — well under half the UK national median for a 2-bed, and meaningfully cheaper than most English cities of comparable size. If you want low rents and easy access to the North West, it's worth a serious look.
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Rent runs at £758 a month — 31% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 25% below the national average.
no primary schools within a 1.5 km walk; no secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment.
Weak transport links — 19/100; nearest rail station is around 2168 m away; Liverpool is reachable in 89 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 Wrexham
Wrexham is a compact Welsh market town with a lot more going on than its size suggests. It has a proper town centre, a strong local identity, and — thanks to a certain football club — more name recognition than most places of 138,000 people tend to get. It's not a commuter satellite or a university city; it's its own thing, with a working economy anchored in health, manufacturing and local services.
The renter base here is fairly spread across age groups — Wrexham is unusually evenly split, with roughly one in five residents in each of the main age bands from under-18 through to 65-plus. That means you're less likely to land in a street full of students or a suburb of retired homeowners; the mix is broad. Around 30% of households are single-person, slightly above average, and owner-occupation is common — private renters are a minority here, which keeps competition lower than in bigger cities.
On costs, Wrexham is genuinely cheap by UK standards. A two-bed runs about £700 a month; a one-bed drops to around £590; a three-bed sits at roughly £825. These figures are well below what you'd pay in Chester, Manchester or almost anywhere in the South. Rents have risen around 5% in the past year, so the direction of travel is upward, but the base is low enough that affordability remains strong — the median rent takes up around 40% of typical take-home pay, which is worth watching but not unusual for smaller Welsh towns.
The honest trade-off is schools and transport. None of the schools within typical catchment distance are currently rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted, which is a real gap given the national average sits at around 89%. And if you need to commute by public transport, the connections are limited — only around 3% of residents use public transport to get to work, and the nearest mainline rail station is roughly 2.8 km away. Most people drive.
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All areas in Wrexham
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.
- Wrexham 010F
- Wrexham 012D
- Wrexham 010E
- Wrexham 011D
- Wrexham 008A
- Wrexham 017E
- Wrexham 005D
- Wrexham 023E
- Wrexham 011B
- Wrexham 023G
- Wrexham 015B
- Wrexham 017B
- Wrexham 011A
- Wrexham 012A
- Wrexham 008F
- Wrexham 004C
- Wrexham 021C
- Wrexham 022D
- Wrexham 010C
- Wrexham 008B
Showing 20 of 84 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.