Living in Leeds
107 neighbourhoods · 488 sub-areasLeeds is one of the UK's largest cities — around 845,000 people — and one of the more affordable major urban centres in England. A typical 2-bed flat runs about £960 a month, noticeably below the national average and a fraction of what you'd pay in central London. It's a city with genuine economic weight: over 500,000 jobs based here and a fast rail link to Manchester.
Best for…
Pick a renter archetypeArea overview
Skim every section on this page in one scroll. Each card gives an overall rating plus the headline stats — tap any heading to jump to the full section with charts, breakdowns and methodology.
Rent runs at £1,132 a month — broadly in line with the national median.
Police-recorded crime runs in line with the national average.
6 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 7 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 33% Outstanding.
Moderate transport links — 63/100; nearest rail station is around 2091 m away; 13 bus stops within five minutes' walk; Leeds is reachable in 32 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 Leeds
Leeds is a proper big city — the UK's third-largest metropolitan authority by population — with a busy centre, two large universities and a jobs base that spans finance, health and tech. It doesn't feel like a commuter satellite; most of the economic action happens here. That gives the city a self-contained energy that suits people who want urban life without needing to look elsewhere for work.
The renter base skews young. Students and graduates cluster around the inner suburbs close to the universities, while young professionals tend to push into areas like Headingley, Chapel Allerton and Hyde Park. Families with children generally look further out, where three-beds are more affordable and school catchments are stronger. Around a quarter of homes are private rentals — slightly above average for a large English city — and just over half of households own their home.
A two-bed flat averages about £960 a month, which puts Leeds firmly below the national median for that size. One-beds start around £770 and three-beds around £1,120. Rents rose roughly 2.7% over the past year — modest by recent UK standards. Council tax for a Band D property runs about £2,284 a year, or around £190 a month. The median annual salary for residents is just under £32,000, which means a typical two-bed takes up a significant share of take-home pay — something to factor in if you're moving here on a starter salary.
The honest trade-off is school quality. Only around 43% of schools within typical catchment distance are rated Good or Outstanding by Ofsted — well below the national figure of roughly 89%. That's a meaningful gap if you're moving with children, and it's worth researching individual catchments carefully rather than assuming proximity means quality.
Similar cities to Leeds
Cities with the closest profile to Leeds on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in Leeds
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.
- Leeds 053C
- Leeds 110G
- Leeds 075D
- Leeds 065A
- Leeds 063B
- Leeds 086D
- Leeds 082C
- Leeds 053B
- Leeds 111B
- Leeds 055G
- Leeds 112F
- Leeds 055F
- Leeds 042E
- Leeds 110E
- Leeds 086C
- Leeds 063D
- Leeds 048C
- Leeds 091A
- Leeds 037D
- Leeds 102F
Showing 20 of 488 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.