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Search homes for sale in Oxborough, Breckland. New listings are added daily by local estate agents.
The 2 bed flat sector typically includes two separate bedrooms, dedicated living areas, and bathroom facilities. Properties in Oxborough span purpose-built blocks, converted period houses, and modern apartment complexes on various floors.
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Showing 0 results for 2 Bedroom Flats for sale in Oxborough, Breckland.
Oxborough’s property market has the same feel as the village itself, small-scale, distinctive, and often short on available homes. Recent recorded transactions show detached properties reaching a median sale price of £880,000 in 2024. That figure speaks to the shortage of larger houses here, and to the premium buyers are willing to pay for space, privacy, and period character in this part of Norfolk.
Looking at 2023 sales, semi-detached homes in Oxborough changed hands at a median of £283,750, while terraced properties reached a median of £215,000 across three sales. Much of the housing stock is older and built in traditional Norfolk materials such as brick, flint, and pantile. New build supply is effectively absent, with homedata.co.uk recording 0% of sales as new build properties in 2024, so buyers here are usually choosing from existing character homes rather than newly finished stock.
Across Norfolk, the wider market has softened a little, with average prices down by approximately £5,800 (-2%) over the twelve months to late 2024, according to homedata.co.uk. Oxborough does not always move in step with those county figures. Limited supply and the village’s particular appeal can help support values, especially for well-presented detached homes close to the village centre or near Oxburgh Hall, where prices often sit well above the local average.
In Oxborough, listings tend to feature estate cottages, converted farm buildings, and from time to time a home with land attached. The PE33 postcode covers several neighbouring settlements, so buyers need to read the location wording carefully rather than relying on the postcode alone. We keep our listings updated as fresh instructions appear, which matters in a village where opportunities can be easy to miss.

Only approximately 257 people live in Oxborough, and that small population still gives the village a close-knit feel. Numbers have shifted only slightly over time, from 228 residents in 2011 to 230 in the 2021 Census, then to an estimated 257 in 2024. That sort of stability says a lot about village life in this part of Breckland, where people tend to know their neighbours and local events still mark out the year.
Two churches and one major historic house shape much of Oxborough’s identity. St John the Evangelist, a Grade I listed parish church dating from 1496, stands alongside the Roman Catholic Church of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary and St Margaret, which is Grade II*. Then there is Oxburgh Hall, run by the National Trust, bringing visitors, jobs, notable gardens, period interiors, and its striking moated setting. Around it, the Norfolk Breckland landscape opens into walking routes across farmland and woodland within the wider Breckland Forest area.
For everyday shopping and services, most residents head to Downham Market or Swaffham, where there are supermarkets, independent shops, and medical facilities. Oxborough has in the past supported a post office and village shop, though services of that kind rely heavily on regular local use. For a broader retail offer, King’s Lynn is the main destination, about 20 miles west, with retail parks, national chains, and more places to eat.
Life in the village is not busy, but it is far from empty. The National Trust presence at Oxburgh Hall brings seasonal events, craft workshops, and family activities through the year, while the parish council continues to meet on local matters. Residents also come together for the village fete and harvest celebrations. Anyone arriving from a town or city usually notices the slower pace first, then the rewards that come with it.

Families looking at Oxborough usually plan schooling around the surrounding villages and nearby market towns. The village falls within the catchment for primary provision in neighbouring communities, and St Mary’s Church of England Primary Academy in nearby Shouldham is one of the schools serving local families. Smaller rural primaries often appeal for their close community links and compact class sizes, which many parents value in the early years.
By secondary stage, most families are looking towards Swaffham or Downham Market. Both towns offer comprehensive schools with sixth form provision, and many households choose to stay in Oxborough while relying on those centres for education. That balance suits plenty of people, village life at home, broader facilities in the nearby towns, and access to established schools without giving up what draws them to Oxborough in the first place.
Childcare in Norfolk is available through a range of providers, though rural areas can have fewer options than larger urban centres. In practice, that means parents should register interest early if they are planning a move, because places in nearby village nurseries can go quickly. For older children, school bus arrangements often serve Oxborough, but we always suggest confirming the current position with Norfolk County Council before exchange.

Set in rural Norfolk, Oxborough is linked to the surrounding area by country lanes running through the Breckland landscape. Downham Market station is the nearest rail stop, approximately 8 miles away, with regular trains to Cambridge and London King’s Cross. Journey times to the capital are around 90 minutes, which can make the village workable for people who need occasional London access but want to live in the countryside.
Road travel is straightforward enough, provided you are comfortable with rural driving. The A10 lies east of Oxborough and gives access towards King’s Lynn, as well as onward links to the A47 and A14. Norwich is approximately 35 miles to the south-east and has the nearest major airport, with domestic and European routes. Buses do serve village stops and nearby market towns, but evening and Sunday services are limited, so most residents treat car ownership as essential for shopping, appointments, and day-to-day errands.
Anyone commuting to King’s Lynn, Norwich, or Cambridge will usually find the driving times manageable, and rail users often rely on Downham Market. The station has parking, though regular commuters should check season ticket availability before making plans around daily travel. For people working from home, broadband has improved across the village, but actual superfast speeds can still vary within the PE33 postcode area depending on the exact location.

Our advice is to begin with the local numbers as well as the available homes. Oxborough’s average price stands at £380,508, and with stock often limited, it helps to know how detached, semi-detached, and terraced properties tend to perform before you start viewing. It is also worth understanding the effect of conservation area controls and listed building status, as both can shape what owners may or may not do to a property here.
Before arranging viewings, speak to a mortgage broker and secure an agreement in principle. Sellers take buyers more seriously when finance is already lined up, and it can make a difference when you come to offer. That matters even more at the upper end of the village market, where detached homes can approach the £880,000 median and rural values sometimes need a broker who understands the local picture.
Spend time in Oxborough itself, not just in the house you have come to see. Walk around the village, call in at Oxburgh Hall, and pay attention to how the place feels across the day. We often suggest returning in different weather conditions too, because a rural village can present itself very differently in summer sunshine than on a wet winter afternoon.
Older homes in Oxborough deserve careful scrutiny before any purchase goes ahead. In many cases we recommend a RICS Level 2 Homebuyer Report to pick up structural issues, damp, and other defects, particularly given the village’s heritage housing and conservation area setting. Where a property has a thatched roof or unusual construction, a RICS Level 3 Building Survey may be the better option for a fuller assessment of more complex risks.
Once you are ready to proceed, you will need a conveyancing solicitor to deal with searches, contracts, and title registration. Rural property experience can make a real difference, especially where listed buildings, conservation area constraints, or unusual ownership histories are involved. Our team regularly works on transactions of that kind, so we know the extra checks that can come with buying in a village like Oxborough.
After the survey results are in and the legal work is settled, the purchase moves to exchange of contracts and then completion. On the agreed day, ownership transfers and the keys can be collected. We stay on hand throughout, and if you need recommendations for local services once you are moving into Oxborough, we can point you in the right direction.
Oxborough is a Conservation Area, so buying here means more than simply checking the house itself. Within the village boundary, additional planning controls apply to help protect historic character, and significant alterations, extensions, or even changes to exterior paintwork may need consent from Breckland District Council. Some named properties, including Chantry House, Chapel Lodge, and Hall Farmhouse, are also listed, which brings tighter restrictions and makes specialist survey input especially important.
Plenty of Oxborough’s homes were built in traditional Norfolk brick, flint, and pantile, and they can ask more of an owner than a modern house would. We strongly recommend a RICS Level 2 survey for any purchase here, as it can highlight damp, roof problems, subsidence risk, and ageing electrical systems. Homes near the River Gadder or in lower ground may also need closer attention on drainage and any past flooding, while buyers should make sure they understand whether a property is freehold or leasehold, particularly where historic ownership arrangements bring unusual terms or charges.
Construction details matter in this village. Many houses have solid floors rather than suspended timber floors, and that can leave them more open to damp penetration unless the condition has been properly checked. Pantile roofs, so common across Norfolk, may suffer slipped or broken tiles after severe weather, which is something our surveyors look at closely. Older electrics can be another issue, and upgrading them is not always a small item in the budget.
During viewings, it pays to look beyond decoration. Flint knapping on walls and outbuildings is a traditional feature around Oxborough, and where it is damaged or breaking down, there may be moisture ingress or movement behind it. Original windows and doors often add a great deal of character, but they can also require costly repair or replacement to improve energy performance, and listed status may mean formal permission is needed before any change is made. Our inspectors work across Norfolk regularly and know the building methods commonly found in this part of Breckland.

Current listings put the average property price in Oxborough at £380,508. Recent transactions show detached homes at a median of £880,000, semi-detached properties at £283,750, and terraced homes at £215,000. Even so, this is not a market where one figure tells the whole story. Sales volumes are limited, stock ranges from small period cottages to larger estate houses, and values can shift sharply depending on condition, setting, and historic features. Norfolk overall saw prices fall by approximately 2% in the twelve months to late 2024, but Oxborough’s low supply still helps underpin demand.
Council tax in Oxborough is set under the authority of Breckland District Council. The band attached to a property will depend on its valuation, with smaller terraced cottages often sitting in bands A-C and larger detached or period homes more likely to fall into bands D-G according to size and value. Buyers should always check the individual band during enquiries or through the Valuation Office Agency website, because the ongoing running cost can vary noticeably from one property to another.
There is no school in Oxborough itself. Primary education is provided through nearby villages and surrounding communities, with St Mary’s Church of England Primary Academy often chosen by local families, while secondary options are usually found in Swaffham and Downham Market. Both are reachable by school transport and both offer comprehensive education with sixth form provision. Catchment areas can change, so we always suggest confirming the current position with Norfolk County Council, especially for families moving in from elsewhere.
Public transport is available, but no one would describe it as extensive. Downham Market station, approximately 8 miles away, is the main rail link, with direct services to Cambridge and London King’s Cross and journey times of around 90 minutes to the capital. Buses connect Oxborough with places including Swaffham and King’s Lynn, though frequencies are lighter than in urban areas and evening and Sunday services are limited. For most households, a car is part of everyday life here.
As an investment location, Oxborough is unusual rather than high-volume. Its appeal rests on heritage, the National Trust presence at Oxburgh Hall, and the fact that homes within the conservation area do not come up for sale very often. That scarcity can help support values over time. Rental demand is likely to be modest, given the population of approximately 257 residents and the limited level of local employment, but houses with genuine character and a strong connection to the village setting can still draw interest from people chasing the classic English village ideal.
For 2024-25, stamp duty applies at 0% on the first £250,000, 5% from £250,001 to £925,000, 10% from £925,001 to £1.5 million, and 12% above £1.5 million. First-time buyers receive relief on the first £425,000 and then pay 5% between £425,001 and £625,000. Against Oxborough’s average price of £380,508, many purchases fall into the lower end of the scale, but detached homes moving towards the £880,000 median can make the calculation much more involved.
New build supply in Oxborough is almost non-existent. homedata.co.uk records 0% of sales as new build properties in 2024, which equates to zero new build sales from one total transaction. In reality, nearly everything on offer is an existing home built with traditional Norfolk materials such as brick, flint, and pantile. Buyers wanting modern layouts and stronger energy performance may therefore need to look at older houses with updating potential. There is also a scheme called Talbot Manor Gardens on Lynn Road offering new detached and semi-detached homes, although buyers should confirm whether it sits within the Oxborough parish boundary.
Planning constraints are part of the picture in Oxborough, not an afterthought. Because the village sits within a Conservation Area, Breckland District Council applies tighter controls over permitted development, so extensions, major alterations, and some external changes may all need consent before work starts. The presence of Grade I and Grade II* listed buildings adds another layer, since listed building consent is required for changes affecting the fabric or appearance of those historic properties. We usually advise a thorough RICS Level 2 survey here, so buyers can weigh condition and likely restoration costs before committing.
Beyond the agreed purchase price, buyers need to budget for tax and fees from the outset. Under the 2024-25 stamp duty system, a property bought at Oxborough’s average value of £380,508 sits above the 0% threshold on the first £250,000, so the exact bill depends on the buyer’s position and the applicable rates. First-time buyers purchasing at £380,508 would still benefit from relief on the first £425,000. Once values move towards or beyond £925,000, the cumulative structure of the bands becomes much more important for accurate budgeting.
Other purchase costs can add up quickly. Conveyancing fees commonly range from £500 to £1,500, depending on complexity and on whether the property is leasehold or involves listed building issues. A RICS Level 2 survey typically costs between £380 and £629 for homes in this price bracket, with larger or more complicated properties costing more. Mortgage arrangement fees, valuation fees, and local authority search charges also need to be allowed for. In Oxborough, older buildings and conservation area rules can make specialist surveys a sensible extra rather than an optional one.
It is also wise to include mortgage broker fees in your figures, whether these are charged as a fixed amount or as a percentage of the loan. Survey fees in Oxborough vary by property size and value, and detached homes generally cost more to inspect than terraced houses because the survey takes longer. Title registration fees, plus any estate agent costs if you are selling at the same time, should sit in the budget too. When you begin your Oxborough search, our team can set out the likely costs clearly, so nothing appears out of the blue later in the transaction.

Competitive mortgage rates for Oxborough buyers
From 3.5%
Expert property solicitors for Oxborough transactions
From £499
Professional homebuyer surveys for Oxborough properties
From £350
Energy performance certificates for all properties
From £60
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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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