Browse 60 homes for sale in NP23 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 NP23 span detached, semi-detached, and occasionally terraced configurations, with styles ranging from period properties to modern executive homes.
£290k
25
1
109
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 25 results for 4 Bedroom Houses for sale in NP23. 1 new listing added this week. The median asking price is £290,000.
Source: home.co.uk
Detached
13 listings
Avg £338,107
Semi-Detached
7 listings
Avg £293,571
Terraced
5 listings
Avg £206,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Across NP23, recent market data points to some clear price bands, which makes it easier to sort the search. homedata.co.uk records show detached homes selling at about £287,633, semi-detached homes at around £192,241, terraced properties near £129,793, and flats at roughly £100,934. For first-time buyers and upsizers, that creates very different ways into the same postcode. It also underlines how much street, property type, and condition can shift the value.
The past 12 months have brought some price growth, with NP23 rising by 5.18%. Sales activity was less upbeat. There were 276 residential sales in the last year, 49 fewer than the year before, which amounts to a fall of 17.75%. Not every pocket has behaved the same way either, with NP23 4GB up 3% on the previous year but still 14% below its 2023 peak, while NP23 5RG remains 43% below its 2022 high. For buyers, that matters, because it highlights where values have eased and where demand still looks firm.
New-build supply gives the market a different angle, especially for buyers keen on lower upkeep. At Carn Y Cefn on Waun-Y-Pound Road, home.co.uk listings currently show homes from Persimmon Homes East Wales starting at £238,995 for a 3 bedroom semi-detached Hanbury, then rising to £334,995 for 4 bedroom detached house types such as The Lumley. Other live options include The Delamare from £279,995 and The Clayton Corner from £294,995. For anyone after a warranty, modern insulation, and a simpler buying route, these plots are well worth a proper look.
NP23 feels like a working town with its own identity, not a place trying to pass as a city suburb. A large share of the housing is terraced, which appeals to buyers after value, practical layouts, and a street pattern that is easy to get to grips with. Towards the edges, there are also semi-detached and detached homes, especially where newer schemes have gone up or where roads spread out towards the hillside. The result is a market with room at several price points, and that helps explain the pull for both first-time buyers and families trading up.
Daily life here is shaped by Ebbw Vale and the wider Blaenau Gwent setting, where useful amenities often count for more than postcode prestige. Nearby vacancies in retail and hospitality, including jobs in Brynmawr and Ebbw Vale itself, suggest the area still has an active day-to-day economy. Buyers who prefer a grounded, no-fuss community often warm to the pubs, local shops, and straightforward access into the surrounding Valleys landscape. For an established area with accessible services and enough variation to compare street by street, NP23 makes a solid case.

For many families searching in NP23, the first check is schools in and around Ebbw Vale, and only then does the map widen across Blaenau Gwent. There are local schools here and the postcode works well as a family base, but catchments can change from one intake year to the next, so it is sensible to verify admissions before making an offer. That matters even more if you need a particular primary school or want a secondary option that fits travel patterns and wraparound care. Our advice is straightforward, confirm the current catchment before getting too attached to a home.
Teenagers change the calculation a bit. Older pupils and home movers with them often place more value on having several education options within reach, rather than depending on one single institution. Sixth-form and further-education choices across the borough can make NP23 a workable base for families wanting to stay local while keeping progression routes open. A house can tick every box on paper and still be the wrong fit if the school run is awkward, so the everyday journey matters more than the Ofsted label. When we compare homes with buyers, we always come back to travel time, after-school clubs, and whether the route still feels realistic in winter.

For commuting, the road links do a lot of the heavy lifting in NP23. The A465 is the key route for many buyers, connecting the town towards Merthyr Tydfil, the eastern Valleys, and the M4 direction through the wider Welsh road system. Rail services from Ebbw Vale add a useful public transport alternative, particularly for trips towards Cardiff and the central belt. Taken together, road and rail give the postcode more flexibility than plenty of buyers expect at first glance.
Local buses, smaller roads, and short journeys between neighbouring towns all play their part too. Parking tends to be easier than in a dense city centre, although older terraces can still bring on-street competition at the busiest times. Anyone walking or cycling will need to account for the terrain, because the Valleys landscape means steeper routes and slower climbs in places. If commuting is a priority, we would check the route from the actual front door before committing, not just the postcode line on a map.

Start with a direct comparison of terraces, semis, and new-build plots, so you can see where value sits in NP23. We would also look hard at recent sold prices, parking, and the condition of neighbouring homes, because the street can carry just as much weight as the postcode.
Before viewings gather pace, get a mortgage agreement in principle in place, then sort your deposit and allow for legal fees, surveys, and moving costs. Buyers who get organised early are often in a better position to move quickly when the right home comes up.
If possible, go back at different times of day. Parking, traffic, and street noise can feel quite different in the evening than they do in mid-morning. Ask about broadband, heating, roof age, and any work the seller has already carried out while you are there.
Many standard homes are well covered by a RICS Level 2 survey, but older, altered, or less usual properties may call for a fuller RICS Level 3 inspection. In NP23, that extra scrutiny can be especially worthwhile if you are considering a terrace showing signs of damp, settlement, or roof wear.
It helps to tell your conveyancer from the outset if the purchase is a new build, a leasehold flat, or a property with shared access, because each of those can need extra checks. We would want searches, title review, and enquiries moving together, so the transaction does not lose momentum.
Once the mortgage offer is in hand and the legal work is wrapped up, contracts can be exchanged and a completion date agreed. Keep funds easy to access and removal plans reasonably flexible, because good homes in NP23 can draw more than one serious buyer.
Because older terraces make up such a big share of the local market, condition matters every bit as much as location. We advise checking roofs, gutters, pointing, and any signs of damp carefully, as these are common pressure points in established homes across Wales and the wider UK. Windows, ventilation, and insulation also deserve close attention, especially where a property has been extended or modernised over time. A well-kept terrace can be a very sensible buy, but only where the structure and maintenance record stack up.
Buyers are often surprised by how much hillside plots and older streets can bring drainage, retaining walls, and external paths into the picture. If a house sits on a slope, ask the surveyor to inspect cracking, ground movement, and the way rainwater drains away from the building. Flats come with a different list, including lease length, ground rent, service charges, and responsibility for communal repairs. With new builds, we would also ask about warranties, snagging, and any incentive packages before a reservation is made.
From the research we reviewed, flood risk and conservation restrictions do not stand out as area-wide concerns, but each plot still needs its own check. That is even more important where a home backs onto open ground, sits near a stream, or has unusual garden levels. Buyers thinking ahead to resale should also weigh up parking, storage, and how well the layout works for normal family life. In practice, the strongest purchase is usually the one that balances price, condition, and future running costs, not simply the biggest house available.
On recent sold-price evidence, a typical home in NP23 comes in at around £145,118, according to homedata.co.uk records. That headline only tells part of the story, though. Terraced homes have sold near £129,793, while detached houses have reached around £287,633. So the right benchmark depends on property type, condition, and the particular street. When we assess value, we prefer sold prices from the nearest streets rather than relying on the postcode average by itself.
NP23 falls within Blaenau Gwent County Borough, and council tax is charged by property, not simply by postcode. Lower-value terraces will often sit in lower bands, while larger detached homes usually fall higher. The exact band comes down to the individual dwelling and its valuation history, so the safest course is to check the address itself before setting the budget. Our team would expect the solicitor or the local authority to confirm the current band for any property under consideration.
School choice usually sends families into a wider search across Ebbw Vale and Blaenau Gwent before they narrow back down to a specific street. There is no one-size-fits-all answer for NP23, because admissions and catchment boundaries can change and the best fit depends on the property itself. If a particular primary, secondary, or sixth-form route matters to you, check the latest admissions map before putting in an offer. It is a small step that can prevent a lot of hassle later on.
One of NP23's practical advantages is public transport. Ebbw Vale rail connections, together with the wider Valleys road network and the A465, make commuting more manageable than many buyers first assume. Bus routes linking local towns add another useful layer if driving every day is not the plan. For any commuting purchase, we would test the exact journey from the front door rather than assuming every street works in the same way.
For investors, NP23 can offer a relatively affordable way in with steady local demand behind it. The market includes a strong terrace segment, a typical sold price near £145,118, and a year-on-year increase of 5.18%, all of which gives the area a degree of resilience. Even so, returns will still come down to the street, the level of rental demand, and how much work the property needs. If we were buying to let here, we would check local rental rules, upkeep costs, and likely tenant appeal before going ahead.
Stamp duty for a standard buyer in 2024-25 is 0% up to £250,000, then 5% from £250,000 to £925,000. On that basis, a purchase at £145,118 would usually mean no stamp duty, while a £319,995 new build would attract tax on the portion above £250,000. First-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000, so a large share of NP23 purchases sit below the relief threshold altogether. Second homes and investment properties can cost more, so we would get the figures checked early.
Yes, there are active new-build options in the market, particularly around Ebbw Vale. At Carn Y Cefn on Waun-Y-Pound Road, homes are currently available from around £238,995 to £334,995, with both three and four bedroom layouts. They can suit buyers looking for lower running costs, a warranty, and less immediate repair work. We would just keep reservations, snagging, and any estate service charges in view if they apply.
Terraced homes account for a large part of the local sales mix, which is typical across many Welsh Valleys postcodes. They are often the easiest entry point on price, with recent sold values around £129,793, while semi-detached homes and detached houses sit higher up the scale. Buyers wanting extra room or a driveway often climb into semis or detached homes on quieter streets. The best fit comes down to what matters most, price, garden space, parking, or longer-term flexibility.
In NP23, stamp duty is often fairly manageable because many homes fall below the main threshold. Under the current 2024-25 rules, standard buyers pay 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million, and 12% above that. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000, then 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. Given a typical sold price of around £145,118, a lot of buyers would have no stamp duty to pay at all.
Some larger homes and certain new-build plots will still create a tax bill, so it makes sense to model the numbers before making an offer. A £319,995 purchase would lead to a standard stamp duty charge on the slice above £250,000, while a first-time buyer could still pay nothing so long as the price stays below the £425,000 relief limit. Legal fees, survey costs, mortgage fees, and moving expenses all need to be counted alongside the tax, because the total buying budget matters more than the headline figure. Our property search helps set the home price against the wider cost of purchase, so we can move with a clear view of what the deal really involves.
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