Browse 115 homes for sale in DE75 from local estate agents.
The larger property sector typically features multiple bathrooms, substantial reception space, and private gardens or off-street parking. Four bedroom houses in DE75 span detached, semi-detached, and occasionally terraced configurations, with styles ranging from period properties to modern executive homes.
£375k
27
2
134
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 27 results for 4 Bedroom Houses for sale in DE75. 2 new listings added this week. The median asking price is £375,000.
Source: home.co.uk
Detached
22 listings
Avg £380,723
Terraced
3 listings
Avg £178,333
Semi-Detached
2 listings
Avg £307,500
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
homedata.co.uk records show that DE75 has a solid spread of property types, with detached homes at £310,865 and semis at £205,774 sitting in the middle of the market. Terraced houses average £152,616, which keeps the postcode appealing for buyers who want a lower entry point without leaving the area entirely. Flats are far fewer in the local mix, but the average at £107,000 still gives first-time buyers and downsizers a useful benchmark. The overall average of £228,674 sits below many Derbyshire commuter hotspots, which helps explain why the postcode remains on the radar for value-led movers.
Transaction levels have cooled, with 208 sales in the last year compared with a stronger previous period, and that gives buyers a little more room to compare homes carefully. homedata.co.uk shows the market was 5% down on the prior year, although prices were still 2% above the 2023 peak of £223,206. Price shifts like that often favour prepared buyers who already have finance lined up and know what each street offers. If you are serious about a move in DE75, use recent sold data as a guide, then compare condition, plot size and parking rather than focusing on asking price alone.

Heanor gives DE75 a distinctly local feel, with the sort of housing mix that usually develops over many decades rather than a single master-planned phase. The postcode shows a strong presence of terraced, semi-detached and detached homes, and the long transaction history in parts of DE75 7 suggests established streets with repeat sales over time. That kind of stock often appeals to buyers who want gardens, parking, and a home that already sits within a settled community. It also tends to create a resale market with broad demand, because different price points all sit within the same area.
Derbyshire's coal mining heritage matters here, because older ground conditions can influence what a surveyor looks for, especially on pre-1980 homes. Specific flood hot spots, conservation clusters and geology risks were not verified in the initial research, so address-level checks remain the right way to confirm the details of a particular plot. A RICS Level 2 survey is often a smart choice on this type of housing stock, since it can flag movement, damp or roof issues before you commit. Buyers who take that extra step usually understand the house better, which makes the move feel more controlled.
The lifestyle appeal in DE75 is practical rather than flashy, and that works well for people who want a town base with straightforward everyday living. Buyers often like the balance between affordable terraces and more spacious detached homes, because it keeps the postcode open to first-time purchasers, families and downsizers at the same time. Established streets can also mean better-known parking patterns, mature gardens and a stronger feel for the neighbourhood before you ever move in. For many people, that combination of value and familiarity is exactly what makes Heanor worth a closer look.

Families considering a move in DE75 should treat school checks as a street-by-street exercise rather than a postcode-wide assumption. Our initial research did not verify live Ofsted grades or named top-performing schools for the area, so the safest route is to check current admissions maps, inspection reports and travel times before you offer. State-school admissions in this part of Derbyshire are handled through Derbyshire County Council, which makes catchment boundaries especially important. A house that looks ideal on paper can be less attractive if the school place you want is already out of reach.
Primary and secondary choices matter in different ways, but both can affect resale value if buyers with children keep returning to the same streets. Homes that sit inside a realistic catchment often attract more attention, which can support demand for family semis and detached properties. If sixth form or further education is part of your plan, look beyond the immediate postcode and check the wider Derbyshire corridor as well. That wider view helps you balance classroom access, commute times and the size of the home you actually need.
School-focused buyers usually move fastest when finance is already prepared and the shortlist is tight. A mortgage agreement in principle gives you more credibility with agents, while a clear catchment check stops you wasting time on the wrong address. Think about the journey to school at peak times too, because drop-off traffic and parking can matter as much as lesson times. A good family purchase in DE75 is one that still works once the school run, work commute and weekend routine all kick in.

Commuters in DE75 usually look to road links first, with the A610 and A38 giving access towards Nottingham and Derby, while the M1 remains the wider regional route for longer trips. Rail users often rely on nearby stations outside the postcode itself, so it is wise to check actual door-to-door timings rather than assuming the nearest rail option will be quick enough every day. That matters if you are commuting five days a week, because parking, train frequency and the final walk from station to office can all affect the real journey. A slightly cheaper house that saves thirty minutes a day can easily prove the better buy.
Bus services around Heanor help with local errands and school runs, which can reduce pressure on the household car budget. Cyclists should test routes in person, since Derbyshire gradients can feel very different from flatter urban commutes. Parking is another practical point, especially on older terraces where on-street space may be tighter in the evening. For buyers with more than one vehicle, frontage depth and side access can matter more than a small increase in interior floor area.
The most convenient home is usually the one that keeps your routine simple, not just the one with the lowest asking price. That is why we recommend lining up finance, transport checks and viewing plans at the same time, rather than handling each task in isolation. With 208 sales recorded over the last year, a prepared buyer can still find opportunities, but the good ones rarely stay ignored for long. If the right address appears, being ready to view and offer can make all the difference.
Arrange a mortgage agreement in principle before you start serious viewings, so local agents know you are proceedable and sellers take your offer more seriously.
Compare terraced, semi-detached and detached homes in DE75, then look at parking, garden size, access and the feel of the surrounding street.
Test for damp, roof wear, signs of movement and any upgrade work that may affect cost, especially on older homes with long sale histories.
A RICS Level 2 survey is often a good fit for the older housing stock common in DE75, because it can highlight visible problems before exchange.
Your conveyancer will handle searches, title checks and enquiries, including mining-related checks or other local issues if the address needs them.
Once your lender, solicitor and survey results are all aligned, you can exchange contracts and set a completion date with more confidence.
Older housing is common in DE75, so a close look at brickwork, pointing, roofs, gutters and damp signs is sensible on almost every viewing. Long transaction histories in some parts of the postcode suggest mature streets, which often means homes that have already seen decades of use rather than recent construction. A RICS Level 2 survey is useful on that kind of stock because it can flag visible issues before you commit to the purchase. Finding a defect early is usually far cheaper than discovering it after completion.
Heanor's Derbyshire location also means coal mining history should stay on your radar. If the title, street or survey suggests past extraction, your conveyancer should consider the relevant searches and a Coal Authority check where appropriate. Specific flood risk data for DE75 was not verified in the initial research, so address-level environmental searches remain the right way to assess a particular home. If the property sits in a conservation area or has listed status, changes to windows, roofs or frontage details may also need extra care.
Flats and converted homes deserve a separate checklist because lease length, service charges and ground rent can affect the real cost of ownership. Even a freehold-looking house can hide shared access, maintenance obligations or rights of way, so it pays to read the title documents carefully. Extensions and alterations should also be checked against the paperwork, since missing approvals can slow down conveyancing. Buyers who slow down at the legal stage often avoid costly surprises later on.
homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price of £228,674 across DE75 over the last 12 months. Detached homes averaged £310,865, semis £205,774, terraces £152,616 and flats £107,000, so the postcode covers a wide spread of budgets. Sales were also 32.21% lower than the previous year, which means buyers may find a little more time to compare options. If you are price checking a specific street, look at recent sold data rather than relying on the wider postcode average.
Council tax bands vary by property, because the bill depends on the home's valuation band rather than just the postcode. DE75 sits within Amber Valley Borough Council for council tax purposes, but the exact band can differ from one house to the next. A listed asking price does not always tell you the band, so it is worth checking the address before you make an offer. Your agent or conveyancer should be able to confirm it during the buying process.
Our research did not verify live Ofsted data or named top-performing schools for DE75, so the safest answer is to check current admissions maps and inspection reports for the exact street you like. Derbyshire County Council controls state-school admissions in this area, which makes catchment boundaries especially important. A good family home is not only about the school itself, but also about whether the address is actually inside the right catchment. Buyers with children should check this before they get too far into the process.
DE75 is best thought of as a road-connected postcode first, with the A610, A38 and M1 helping with travel across Derbyshire and into nearby cities. Rail users usually rely on stations outside the postcode itself, so journey times should be checked from the front door rather than from the nearest map pin. Bus links help with local travel, school runs and trips into town. If commuting matters, it is worth testing the route at the same time of day you would normally travel.
DE75 can work well for buyers who want a value-led area with a broad mix of homes and a live market. homedata.co.uk shows 208 residential sales in the last year, so there is enough activity for buyers and sellers to keep the postcode moving. The average price of £228,674 sits below many higher-priced commuter spots, which can support demand from first-time buyers and families looking for more space. Investment still depends on the exact street, property condition and likely rental or resale demand.
At the average sold price of £228,674, a standard buyer would currently pay no stamp duty under the 2024-25 thresholds, because the rate is 0% up to £250,000. First-time buyers also pay 0% up to £425,000, so the average DE75 home falls within the nil-rate range for both groups. If you buy above £250,000, the 5% rate applies to the slice between £250,000 and £925,000. Additional homes can attract a surcharge, so the final bill should always be checked against your own circumstances.
A survey is especially useful in DE75 because the local stock includes many older houses, and older homes can hide roof, damp or movement issues. A RICS Level 2 survey is a sensible choice for a typical semi, terrace or older detached home. If the property looks heavily altered, unusual or very old, a more detailed survey may be a better fit. It is cheaper to find out about defects before exchange than after the keys are handed over.
From 4.5%
Compare mortgage rates and get an agreement in principle before you view
From £499
Expert solicitors to handle searches, contracts and completion
From £350
Homebuyer report for older houses and flats in DE75
Price varies
Check energy performance before you make an offer
Stamp duty in DE75 follows the current 2024-25 rates, so the first £250,000 is taxed at 0%, then the slice from £250,000 to £925,000 is taxed at 5%. That means the average sold price of £228,674 sits below the threshold, so a standard buyer would currently pay no SDLT on a home at that level. First-time buyers have a higher nil-rate band, with 0% up to £425,000 and 5% on the slice from £425,000 to £625,000. Buyers of a second home or buy-to-let should also check whether a surcharge applies, because that changes the total bill.
The tax bill is only one part of the purchase cost, so it helps to budget for the deposit, survey, solicitor fees and mortgage costs at the same time. In a postcode like DE75, a RICS Level 2 survey can be a sensible extra spend because many homes are older and may need closer inspection. Legal searches, title work and lender checks can also add time as well as cost, which is why preparation matters. A well-planned budget gives you more room to act quickly when the right property comes up.
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This calculator provides estimates for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. Estimates based on 4.5% interest rate, repayment mortgage. Actual rates depend on your circumstances.
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