Living in Walsall
39 neighbourhoods · 169 sub-areasWalsall, in the West Midlands, is a borough of around 296,000 people and one of the more affordable places to rent in the region. A two-bedroom home goes for about £779 a month — well below the UK average for a 2-bed — though rents rose 7.5% last year, so the affordability gap is narrowing.
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Rent runs at £905 a month — 18% below the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs 21% below the national average.
7 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 9 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 100% Good or better.
Moderate transport links — 65/100; nearest rail station is around 1917 m away; 14 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Birmingham is reachable in 47 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: 21% degree-educated, below the national average.
Living in Walsall
Walsall's a substantial Black Country borough, close to Birmingham but with its own industrial identity. It's the kind of place where your money goes further than in the city centre a few miles to the south, but you're still within reach of everything Birmingham offers. The local jobs market is more limited than the centre — around 98,000 jobs based in the borough and a jobs-per-resident ratio of 0.3 — so most working-age residents commute out.
The renter base is more mixed than in a typical student city. Owner-occupation dominates — nearly 59% of homes are owned — and private renting accounts for around 17% of households, below the national average. Social housing is a bigger part of the picture here than in many comparable boroughs, at nearly 24%. Families are well represented, and around a quarter of the population is under 18.
For costs, a one-bedroom flat runs around £639 a month, a two-bed around £779, and a three-bed around £931. Council tax (Band D) comes to £2,628 a year — roughly £219 a month — which is above the national average. At current rents and salaries, renters are spending close to 46% of take-home pay on rent, which is stretched. A typical deposit takes around 3.8 years to save based on local incomes.
The honest trade-off is this: Walsall scores in the bottom four deprivation deciles nationally, schools within catchment distance lag well behind the national Ofsted average, and crime runs noticeably above the UK average. If you're moving here for affordability, that context matters.
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All areas in Walsall
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.
- Walsall 036B
- Walsall 018E
- Walsall 034D
- Walsall 034B
- Walsall 025B
- Walsall 031C
- Walsall 036A
- Walsall 030F
- Walsall 030A
- Walsall 013D
- Walsall 030B
- Walsall 018D
- Walsall 034E
- Walsall 027C
- Walsall 038A
- Walsall 029B
- Walsall 037C
- Walsall 026D
- Walsall 029D
- Walsall 034F
Showing 20 of 169 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.