Leamington Brunswick
Warwick 013 · 6 sub-areas · 10,423 residents
Warwick 013 sits within the Warwick district in the West Midlands, home to around 10,400 people and unusually mixed in tenure — owner-occupiers, private renters, and social housing tenants each make up roughly a third. A typical two-bedroom home lets for about £1,100 a month, broadly in line with the UK median, and Birmingham is reachable in under 35 minutes by public transport.
Leamington Brunswick is a mid-density neighbourhood of Warwick in the West Midlands 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.
Overview
What's it like to live in Leamington Brunswick?
3 parks and 4 playgrounds are within five minutes' walk, so greenspace is reliably close at hand; food and drink within walking distance is workable but not dense — around 11 restaurants and 4 pubs in five minutes; Crime sits around the national average — neither a notable concern nor a notable selling point; Public transport is genuinely strong; most errands and a fair share of social life don't need a car; rents are roughly in line with the national norm, at around £1,237 a month for a typical home; gigabit broadband is effectively universal.
Generated from the latest May 2026 data · refreshed automatically
Figures are aggregated across 6 sub-areas — population-weighted means for rates, sums for counts. Sources cited beneath each section.
Leamington Brunswick in Warwick
Living in Leamington Brunswick
Warwick 013 stands out within the Warwick district for its striking balance across tenure types. Around a third of households own their home, another third rent privately, and nearly a third are in social housing — a split you rarely see in a single neighbourhood. That mix produces a genuinely varied community rather than the homogeneous feel you get in areas that skew heavily one way.
On costs, the neighbourhood sits close to the national midpoint. A two-bedroom home runs around £1,100 a month — roughly the UK median — and median house prices of about £259,000 mean a deposit is more achievable here than in much of the South East. Years-to-deposit sits at 3.3, which is competitive. Council tax (Band D) comes to about £2,460 a year, so factor that in alongside rent.
The population skews noticeably young: nearly 38% of residents are aged 18–34, well above what you'd typically see in a market town. That's partly explained by the tenure mix and partly by proximity to higher education in the wider region. Single-person households account for about 32% of the total, so this isn't purely family territory — though the 16% of households with couples and children shows families are present too.
Practically, the nearest mainline rail station is around 850 metres away — roughly a ten-minute walk — putting Birmingham within about 35 minutes by public transport. Working from home is common: nearly a third of residents do so, one of the higher shares you'll find outside major city centres. Greenspace is close at hand, with parks typically within 250 metres and around 62% of the neighbourhood within easy walking distance of green space. See the streets and sub-areas below for more on how the neighbourhood breaks down.
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Frequently asked
- Is Warwick 013 a nice place to live?
- It depends what you're after. The neighbourhood has a genuinely mixed community — owner-occupiers, private renters, and social housing tenants in roughly equal thirds — and greenspace is close, typically within 250 metres. Rents are competitive and Birmingham is under 35 minutes away by rail. The trade-off is a crime rate above the national average and a below-average share of Ofsted-rated schools nearby.
- What is the rent in Warwick 013?
- A typical one-bedroom flat runs around £880 a month, a two-bedroom around £1,100, and a three-bedroom around £1,320. These are estimates scaled from council-level ONS data using local sale prices. Rents rose about 2.4% over the past year, which is moderate compared with recent UK trends.
- Is Warwick 013 safe?
- The crime rate sits at around 97.6 incidents per 1,000 residents annually — above the UK national rate of roughly 80 per 1,000. The area sits in deprivation decile 4.7, placing it in the lower-middle range nationally. As with most mixed-tenure urban neighbourhoods, safety varies by street, so it's worth checking the crime widget below for the specific roads you're considering.
- What's the commute from Warwick 013 to Birmingham?
- Birmingham is around 35 minutes away by public transport. The nearest mainline rail station is about 850 metres from the neighbourhood — roughly a ten-minute walk. Around 42% of residents commute by car, and nearly a third work from home, so public transport use for commuting is relatively low at about 4.5%.
- Who lives in Warwick 013?
- The neighbourhood skews young — nearly 38% of residents are aged 18–34 — and is unusually split across tenure types, with roughly equal thirds owning, renting privately, and in social housing. Around a third of households are single-person. About 71% of residents were born in the UK, and roughly 31% hold a degree-level qualification.
- What schools are near Warwick 013?
- There are 96 schools within 2 km, giving a wide choice. Around 33% of those within typical catchment distance are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted — below the national average of roughly 89%. The nearest Outstanding-rated school is approximately 1,190 metres away, which is walkable. Check the schools widget below for named options and current ratings.