Browse 21 homes for sale in Little Lumley from local estate agents.
The 2 bed flat sector typically includes two separate bedrooms, dedicated living areas, and bathroom facilities. Properties in Little Lumley span purpose-built blocks, converted period houses, and modern apartment complexes on various floors.
The market around Little Lumley is best read through Great Lumley, where homedata.co.uk shows a clear mix of stock rather than one dominant property type. Detached homes averaged £265,500 over the last year, semi-detached homes averaged £181,971, terraced homes averaged £193,400 and flats showed a 2025 median of £57,000 from one sale. That spread tells you the area still offers entry-level options alongside larger family houses, which helps first-time buyers and upsizers shop in the same neighbourhood.
Price movement is less straightforward because the available datasets do not all tell the same story. One set of figures shows Great Lumley sales were similar to the previous year and 11% below the 2021 peak of £225,285, while another reports an 11.5% rise over the past 12 months. A separate broader Lumley dataset sits much higher at £485,958 and appears to cover a wider or more expensive boundary, so I would treat Little Lumley as its own market with Great Lumley as the closest day-to-day benchmark.
New-build supply is another area where the boundary matters. I have not verified active new-build schemes inside Little Lumley itself, although nearby developments do appear in the wider DH4 corridor. That means buyers should check postcodes carefully, compare like for like, and avoid assuming a nearby scheme sits within the village boundary just because it shares the Lumley name.

Little Lumley has the feel of a small County Durham village rather than a busy suburban centre. Buyers tend to come here for a calmer pace, local streets with a residential feel and the sense that everyday life still centres on nearby communities such as Great Lumley and Chester-le-Street. That makes the area especially appealing for people who want a quieter base without losing access to larger towns for work, shopping and school runs.
Around here, the landscape and setting matter as much as the house itself. The wider Lumley area sits in a North East setting that gives many homes a more open edge than you would find in a dense urban market, and that often shapes buyer demand. I would expect interest from families, downsizers and commuters who want village living with practical connections rather than a purely rural postcode.
Local amenities are usually drawn from the surrounding area rather than from a single village high street. That makes it important to think about the day-to-day pattern of life before you offer, from food shopping and GP access to weekend walks and trips into Chester-le-Street. If you like the idea of a smaller place with a stronger community feel, Little Lumley is the sort of location that rewards a closer look on foot as well as online.

Families moving to Little Lumley usually need to widen the search to the surrounding Lumley and Chester-le-Street area, because the supplied research does not give enough village-specific school data to rank a single winner. The usual approach is to check primary schools first, then look at secondary options and sixth-form access based on your exact street and catchment. That matters in County Durham, where admissions can change with a small shift in postcode.
I cannot verify current Ofsted grades from the research provided, so the safest route is to check the latest reports before you offer. Buyers with children often compare schools in Great Lumley and Chester-le-Street, then confirm how those catchments work on the address they are considering. If you are hoping to move for a particular school, ask the agent early and do not rely on old forum posts or hearsay.
Education needs also extend beyond school age for many movers. Chester-le-Street and the wider Durham area give access to further education and sixth-form choices that can make the location workable for families with older children. That broader choice is one of the reasons village buyers still keep Little Lumley on their shortlist, even when the immediate settlement feels small.

Road access is one of Little Lumley’s strongest selling points, especially for buyers who commute across County Durham or towards Newcastle. The village sits close enough to the main regional routes that driving is usually the simplest way to get to work, school or the shops. In a smaller settlement like this, I would also expect parking to be easier than in denser urban areas, which adds to day-to-day convenience.
Rail users normally depend on stations in Chester-le-Street or Durham rather than expecting a station inside the village itself. Those links place the area within the practical commuter belt for the wider North East, with services heading towards Durham, Newcastle and other major regional destinations. Journey times vary by service and time of day, so it is worth checking the live timetable before you base your purchase on a commute.
Bus services can be thinner in villages than in the nearby towns, so a car remains the default for many households. That does not make Little Lumley isolated, but it does mean buyers should think about their routine carefully before they commit. If you work irregular hours or depend on late finishes, test the route at the exact time you would travel and check how much flexibility you really have.
Speak to a lender early and secure a mortgage agreement in principle before you book viewings. That shows sellers you are serious and helps you move faster when a good property appears.
Look at homes in Little Lumley alongside Great Lumley so you can judge value, layout and local demand properly. The best offer is often based on what similar homes have actually sold for.
Ask about heating, roof condition, drainage, parking and any changes the seller has made. In a small village market, a well-prepared viewing can reveal more than a glossy listing.
Instruct a conveyancer early and book a RICS Level 2 Survey if the home is a typical house or flat in reasonable condition. That is especially useful where local sold-price data is thin and you want a better picture of the building itself.
Once you are happy with the home, submit a clear offer and keep in close contact with the agent, solicitor and lender. Good communication can shave days off the process when a chain is involved.
After searches, enquiries and final mortgage approval, you exchange contracts and set a completion date. On moving day, make sure utilities, removals and insurance are all lined up so the handover is smooth.
No village-specific flood, geology or shrink-swell risk was verified in the research provided, so a careful survey matters even more than usual. I would still ask your surveyor to check for damp, drainage issues, roof wear and any signs of movement, especially on older homes. If a property has had extensions or alterations, confirm that the paperwork is in order and that the work matches what you can see on site.
Leasehold and freehold questions also deserve attention, particularly if you are looking at a flat. Flats in the wider Lumley market have sold at much lower price points than houses, which can make them look attractive, but service charges, ground rent and reserve funds can change the true cost of ownership quickly. Ask for the lease length, the annual charge and any planned major works before you commit.
Local planning and boundary checks are worth doing as well, because Little Lumley and Great Lumley can be easy to blur together in listings. That matters if you want to stay inside a particular village boundary, school catchment or transport pattern. A good solicitor and a thorough survey help you spot the difference before it becomes an expensive surprise.
Direct sold-price data for Little Lumley itself is limited, so the best nearby benchmark comes from Great Lumley. homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price of £201,339 over the last year, with detached homes at £265,500, semi-detached homes at £181,971 and terraced homes at £193,400. Flats were much cheaper, with a 2025 median of £57,000 based on one sale. That spread shows the local market has options at several price points, but you should still compare each home on its own merits.
Council tax band depends on the exact property, not just the village name. In County Durham, homes can sit in any of the standard UK bands from A to H depending on size, type and valuation history. Before you offer, check the listing, the seller’s paperwork or the Durham County Council records for the specific address. Two houses on the same road can still sit in different bands.
The supplied research does not give enough village-specific school data to name a single best school. Most buyers compare primary and secondary options in Great Lumley and Chester-le-Street, then check the latest Ofsted report and admissions catchment for the exact home they want. If schooling is the reason you are moving, ask the agent which schools buyers on that road usually use. Catchment boundaries can change even when the postcode looks similar.
The area is more road-focused than rail-focused, which suits many village buyers. Rail services are usually accessed through Chester-le-Street or Durham, with links towards Newcastle and other North East destinations. Bus coverage can be thinner than in the nearby towns, so a car is often the most practical option. I would test the commute at the same time of day you expect to travel before you decide.
It can be a sensible long-term choice for investors who want a smaller North East village with family appeal. The market is not especially deep, so growth is more likely to come from stable owner-occupier demand than from rapid trading. Because the local sold-price data is thin, I would focus on property condition, commuter links and how close the home is to Chester-le-Street and other everyday amenities. That gives you a better feel for resale strength.
Standard buyers pay 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,001 to £925,000, 10% from £925,001 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,001 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. If you buy around the Great Lumley benchmark of £201,339, standard SDLT would be nil. Once you move above £250,000, the bill starts to rise quickly.
I have not verified any active new-build developments inside Little Lumley itself. Nearby schemes do appear in the wider DH4 corridor and the surrounding Lumley area, but boundary checks matter here. A development a few minutes away may still fall outside the village you are searching for. Always confirm the postcode and planning location before you rely on a listing.
The simplest way is to get a mortgage agreement in principle before you start viewing. Sellers and agents take your offer more seriously when they know your finances are ready. It also helps to have a solicitor in mind and to move quickly once you find the right home. In a smaller market, speed and clarity can be just as important as the price itself.
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For many buyers in Little Lumley, stamp duty is easier to estimate than in higher-value North East markets because the average Great Lumley benchmark sits below the main SDLT threshold. At £201,339, a standard purchase would usually attract no stamp duty, which can leave more of your budget for surveys, legal fees and moving costs. That said, the bill changes as soon as your purchase price moves above £250,000.
A simple example helps. On a £275,000 purchase, a standard buyer would pay 5% on the slice above £250,000, which works out at £1,250. First-time buyers still benefit from relief up to £425,000, so many lower and mid-range homes in and around Little Lumley fall into a relatively manageable tax bracket. Before you commit, budget for solicitor fees, survey costs, mortgage charges and removal expenses as well, because those totals can add up quickly even when SDLT is low.
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