Living in York
24 neighbourhoods · 121 sub-areasYork is one of the most historically rich cities in the north of England — around 209,000 people — and sits at a curious middle ground on rent: a 2-bed runs about £1,058 a month, slightly below the UK median for two-beds and noticeably more affordable than southern cities, though prices have been climbing steadily.
Overview
Living in York
York's compact, walkable, and genuinely pleasant to live in — a city of about 209,000 people that manages to feel smaller than it is. The old walls, the Shambles, the Minster — they draw tourists by the million, but the city functions well for residents too. It's not a gritty post-industrial turnaround story; it's a place that has been prosperous and well-kept for a long time, which shows in property prices and the general tone of the place.
The renter base is a real mix. Students from the University of York and York St John push up demand in some areas, while young professionals tend to cluster closer to the centre or in the inner suburbs. Families with children are well represented too — around one in five households is a couple with kids, and the city's low deprivation score (IMD decile 7.7 out of 10, meaning it's among the less deprived areas nationally) reflects that settled, mixed character. Just over a fifth of homes are privately rented, which is below the national average — this is a city where most people own.
A 2-bed flat runs around £1,058 a month, and a 3-bed around £1,250. That's manageable relative to many southern cities, though rents have risen about 5% in the past year. Council tax (Band D) comes to roughly £2,287 a year — about £191 a month — which is on the higher side compared to some Yorkshire neighbours. On a typical local salary of around £33,000, renting takes up a significant chunk: roughly 55% of take-home pay for a median earner renting solo.
The honest trade-off is the salary picture. York's economy leans heavily on tourism, health, and retail — sectors that don't pay especially well. The median workplace salary is around £32,000, and with a median house price of roughly £317,000, buying your way out of renting takes time: the data puts it at about 4.8 years to save a deposit, which assumes disciplined saving on a local income. If you're remote-working on a London salary, York is excellent value. If you're working locally, the maths is tighter than the pleasant surroundings might suggest.
LLM-summarised from ONS, MHCLG, DfT, Police.uk and Land Registry data.
Similar cities to York
Cities with the closest profile to York on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
What you need on day one
All sub-areas in York
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.
- York 019D
- York 013I
- York 010D
- York 015D
- York 010B
- York 019B
- York 013C
- York 017E
- York 021D
- York 005B
- York 017A
- York 017D
- York 023B
- York 015B
- York 014B
- York 019F
- York 015E
- York 013E
- York 021C
- York 009B
- York 009A
- York 016A
- York 016C
- York 015F
- York 019A
- York 010E
- York 019E
- York 013H
- York 012D
- York 010A
- York 013A
- York 013G
- York 008B
- York 017C
- York 017B
- York 013F
- York 007A
- York 016D
- York 014A
- York 012C
- York 016E
- York 021B
- York 007B
- York 006A
- York 019C
- York 016F
- York 018E
- York 015C
- York 012A
- York 010C
- York 015A
- York 009E
- York 018D
- York 009C
- York 009D
- York 006B
- York 011B
- York 022C
- York 006D
- York 014D
- York 021A
- York 018B
- York 007C
- York 022D
- York 018F
- York 001B
- York 012F
- York 023D
- York 001A
- York 018A
- York 011C
- York 005C
- York 006E
- York 012B
- York 011A
- York 001D
- York 002B
- York 004D
- York 018C
- York 022E
Showing 80 of 121 sub-areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full sub-area list.