Browse 130 homes for sale in Beckingham, Bassetlaw from local estate agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Beckingham housing market, offering space for families with multiple reception rooms and gardens in many cases. Browse detached, semi-detached, and terraced options ranging from period character homes to contemporary developments.
£289k
3
0
93
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 3 results for 3 Bedroom Houses for sale in Beckingham, Bassetlaw. The median asking price is £289,000.
Source: home.co.uk
Semi-Detached
2 listings
Avg £187,000
Detached
1 listings
Avg £370,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Beckingham is the sort of place where a single deal can shift the mood of the market. home.co.uk shows 11 sold properties in the last year, so turnover is thin and buyers need to pay attention. homedata.co.uk gives an average sold price of £293,471, with values up 5% year on year, which points to steady growth rather than any sharp spike. Detached homes sit at the top at £337,186, which fits a village market where bigger plots and family houses usually draw the strongest demand.
There is still a lower-priced side to the market here. Semi-detached homes average £163,750, while terraces come in at £160,900, and that difference can matter if detached-house money is out of reach. For many buyers, those lower bands are the realistic route into the village. The research found no active new-build developments specifically within DN10, so most choice comes from older stock and established homes. That tends to suit buyers who want character, gardens and a settled street layout more than buyers focused on brand-new supply.
In small rural markets, activity often comes in bursts. A sensibly priced listing in Beckingham can move quickly, especially if it has been refreshed, surveyed or improved without overdoing it. We would put more weight on sold figures than on asking-price headlines, because the sold data shows what buyers have actually paid in the village. That usually gives a firmer base for an offer.

Life in Beckingham does not feel much like life on a town-edge estate. You get open skies, lighter traffic and a slower pace, and that is often the whole point for buyers coming here. For people leaving busier parts of Nottinghamshire, the contrast can be a major draw. Home life and countryside living sit close together, so features like garden space, parking and a bit of privacy often rise to the top of the list.
Rather than a village built around shops and nightlife, Beckingham works better as a practical residential base in Bassetlaw. Most day-to-day errands are dealt with in nearby market towns, while the village itself offers the quieter feel many rural Nottinghamshire buyers are after. That can be a good fit for households that do not need a busy high street outside the front door. It also appeals to downsizers, and to buyers who want less noise and less constant movement around them.
Geography plays its part here. The surrounding landscape, with flatter or gently rolling rural ground, field boundaries and country lanes, is a big reason Beckingham feels open in the first place. For some buyers that sense of space is the attraction. Still, it is wise to think through access, drainage and winter travel before going too far. We find the area suits buyers who put village life first and city-style convenience second.

For families, the first question in Beckingham is often about distance rather than a long shortlist of schools. In a small village, what matters is which primary and secondary schools are actually realistic for the address, so catchments need checking early. Our research for Beckingham does not include a verified local school dataset, so we would shortlist schools across the wider Bassetlaw area and confirm places before any offer goes in. That can save a lot of frustration if a house falls just outside the catchment you need.
Parents looking here usually cast the net wider than the village boundary, especially for everyday schooling and post-16 choices. The wider district offers more options than Beckingham alone, and many buyers weigh journey times just as carefully as Ofsted reports. If education is high on the list, a mortgage agreement in principle is only part of the preparation. We would want the school shortlist ready before a run of viewings starts, so each home can be judged on access and day-to-day living, not only on the kitchen and garden.
With younger children, the right answer is often the school that balances a manageable trip with a strong record and a stable intake. For older children and sixth form students, travel plans may need to be broader, particularly where daily car or bus journeys are likely. In villages like Beckingham, we advise checking the admissions policy, transport links and year-group availability together, not one by one. That gives a fuller view of whether the property works for the whole household.

Transport is one of those things rural buyers really need to test for themselves. In Beckingham, the car usually does most of the work, because timetable choices are rarely as frequent as they are in a larger town. That does not mean the village is cut off. It does mean a sensible commute plan starts with the road network. For buyers working flexible hours, or travelling only a few days each week, Beckingham can make more sense than a place that depends on a daily rail routine.
Often, the deciding point is the road out of the exact house, not the map pin on the listing. Nearby A-roads and the wider Bassetlaw network connect the village to surrounding towns and onward commuting routes, and that is what most local households rely on from day to day. Bus services can help with occasional trips, but they are less suited to tight office timings, so anyone without a car should trial every journey before committing. Parking matters too, because village homes with driveways usually feel easier to live with than homes depending on roadside space.
Rail can still work, but it needs planning. The best station for a given route may be a short drive away rather than something you can walk to from the village, and that is normal in rural Nottinghamshire. It is also one reason so many households here organise life around the car first. If the plan is to commute into a city a few days a week, we would factor in the drive to the station, parking time and the rail leg together. Buyers who do that before moving tend to settle in more comfortably.

Before we book anything, it pays to compare sold prices, property types and the street-by-street feel. In Beckingham, a cottage, a semi and a detached home can differ quite a bit, so the headline price only tells part of the story. Parking, garden size and access can matter just as much.
Get a mortgage agreement in principle lined up before the viewings begin. In a small market with limited turnover, that helps keep you credible with sellers and gives you a better chance of moving quickly.
Try to see homes in daylight and, where possible, go back at a quieter or busier time of day. Village conditions can shift more than buyers expect, especially around road noise, local traffic and parking.
For most standard homes, a RICS Level 2 survey is a sensible step, particularly with older village houses. It can flag roof movement, damp, drainage concerns and maintenance issues before exchange.
It helps to choose a conveyancer early. That way, searches, contracts and enquiries are less likely to drag out the purchase. Rural homes also tend to raise extra points on boundaries, access, drainage or shared responsibilities.
Once the mortgage, survey and legal checks are sorted, the next stage is exchange and completion, backed by a clear moving plan. We would keep funds ready for legal fees, removals and any immediate work the property needs.
In Beckingham, the smart approach is to look hard at the land as well as the house. Rural property can come with private drainage, shared access routes, long driveways or outbuildings, and each of those can carry maintenance arrangements that are less straightforward than in a suburban setting. Older homes deserve an even closer look. We would want the roof, brickwork, chimneys, windows and any extensions checked properly, because they often say more about future cost than the décor ever will. A survey is particularly valuable where a home has been altered over time.
Drainage and flood risk need proper attention in any village, and Beckingham is no different. We would always check the flood history, the drainage type and any maintenance duties tied to ditches, pipes or access tracks before going ahead. Homes with private services can be very good buys, but only when it is clear who pays for repairs and who takes responsibility if something fails. Boundary fences and shared entrances can bring the same sort of complication, sometimes more than buyers expect in a small community.
Most village houses are freehold, but leasehold still appears from time to time in flats, conversions and some shared ownership arrangements. If the purchase is not a straightforward freehold house, we would ask about service charges, ground rent, reserve funds and any rules on alterations before an offer is made. Older buildings can also be affected by conservation controls and listing status, so specialist advice is sensible where a property has historic character or unusual fabric. Our view locally is simple, the best Beckingham purchases are the ones where the building, the title and the access all stack up on paper as well as they do in person.

Over the last 12 months, homedata.co.uk records an average sold price of £293,471 for Beckingham, Bassetlaw, Nottinghamshire. Detached homes averaged £337,186, semi-detached properties averaged £163,750 and terraced homes averaged £160,900. Prices have also risen by 5% year on year, which suggests a gentle lift rather than any dramatic surge. With only 11 sales in the last year, buyers are usually better off checking the sold figures carefully before deciding what to offer.
Council tax here falls under the Bassetlaw District Council area, and the band is based on each property's 1991 valuation, not simply on the fact it sits in Beckingham. So even homes on the same street can end up in different bands where size, type or value vary. Rural cottages, larger detached houses and converted properties may all land differently on the scale. The safest course is to check the individual listing, or have your solicitor confirm the band before exchange.
There is no verified local school ranking for Beckingham in our research, so the more useful route is to compare the nearest options in the wider Bassetlaw area against your own catchment needs. Families tend to weigh primary and secondary schools by travel time, admissions rules and Ofsted information, not by postcode alone. In a village this small, that matters, because an address can sit close to a school and still fall outside its intake area. If schools are central to the move, we would shortlist them before the property search gets going.
Beckingham is more car-led than city-led, which is exactly what you would expect in a rural Nottinghamshire village. Most buyers plan around the road network first, because bus services are usually better for occasional trips than for a strict commuter timetable. Rail remains an option, but the most practical station for your route may be a short drive away rather than within walking distance. Anyone relying on public transport should test the whole journey before making an offer.
For buyers thinking long term, Beckingham can make sense as a low-turnover village market. homedata.co.uk shows only 11 sales in the last 12 months, and the research found no active new-build developments specifically within DN10, so supply appears tight. That can help values when the right home reaches the market. It can also mean resale takes longer, simply because the buyer pool is smaller than it would be in a town. The best fit is often an investor or owner-occupier who values stability, character and a rural setting.
At the 2024-25 rates, stamp duty is 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. Based on Beckingham's average sold price of £293,471, a standard buyer would pay about £2,174 in stamp duty. First-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000, so on the current figures the average Beckingham home would attract no stamp duty for them. We would still budget separately for legal fees, survey costs and moving expenses.
The research found no active new-build developments specifically within Beckingham, DN10. So most of what comes up for sale will be established housing stock, which can suit buyers looking for character, gardens and a settled street pattern. It also means fresh supply is limited, and good homes may not hang around for long. If a new-build feel is non-negotiable, the search may need to stretch beyond the village boundary.
Some buyers will take to Beckingham immediately, others will know it is not for them. It tends to suit people after a quieter rural base rather than a busy urban centre, and it often works well for households that want space, parking and a village atmosphere. Downsizers and move-up buyers both feature in that picture. Car commuters usually find it easier to make Beckingham work than buyers depending on frequent trains or buses. It is a place that rewards planning ahead and checking the practical details before an offer goes in.
For many buyers, stamp duty is the first major extra cost to pin down, and the 2024-25 thresholds are clear enough. The rate is 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above £1.5 million. On Beckingham's average sold price of £293,471, a standard buyer would pay about £2,174 in stamp duty. Move up to a detached home at £337,186 and the bill rises to about £4,359, so property type can shift the budget more than some buyers expect.
First-time buyers are in a different position. Relief keeps the rate at 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, which means a first-time buyer paying Beckingham's average price would currently owe no stamp duty at all. Even then, we would keep money aside for the survey, legal work, mortgage fees and removals. Rural homes can also bring early surprises, from drainage checks and boundary work to minor repairs soon after completion.
Local buyers often find the process easier once the full budget is mapped out before any offer is made. The mortgage payment is only one part of it, because the true cost of moving also includes legal fees, survey costs, SDLT, insurance and the first round of maintenance. To keep things moving smoothly, we would line up the mortgage agreement in principle, choose a solicitor early and book the survey as soon as the offer is accepted. That tends to make a Beckingham purchase feel organised, not rushed.

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