Browse 5 homes for sale in Rivington, Chorley from local estate agents.
One bed apartments provide a separate bedroom alongside distinct living space, bathroom, and kitchen areas. Properties in Rivington are available in various building types including mansion blocks, contemporary developments, and house conversions.
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Rivington does not behave like a neat, average-price village. It is small, full of individual houses, and one road can tell a very different story from the next. homedata.co.uk shows Rivington Lane averaged £945,000 over the last year, while the Rivington Lane section in Anderton, Chorley, Lancashire, PR6 averaged £520,000. Plot size, outlook, privacy and which side of the boundary a property sits on all feed into that gap, so we would judge each address on its own evidence rather than lean too heavily on a village-wide figure.
Look back through the sold data and the lane becomes even more uneven. homedata.co.uk records show Rivington Lane was 49% down on its 2021 peak of £1,850,000, while the Anderton stretch was 13% down on its 2021 peak of £594,950. Across Rivington, the average of £740,000 still sits far above the Lancashire norm, which says a lot about how much buyers pay for scenery, seclusion and period character here. We have not seen a clearly verified active new-build development within the village boundary, so most searches are likely to centre on older houses, conversions and the odd individual scheme rather than a modern estate.

Moorland fringe, reservoirs and rural history have shaped Rivington far more than commuter sprawl. The village sits among Carboniferous Millstone Grit, and local gritstone and sandstone keep reappearing in walls, cottages, farm buildings and boundary walls, usually under slate roofs that give the place its old-Lancashire character. Rivington Hall brings a different note with its Georgian red brick frontage, while Fisher House and several farmhouses show how mixed the historic stock is. With almost half the houses in the village centre listed, the preserved feel is not accidental.
You still read the history in the ground as much as in the buildings. Reservoir construction altered population and land use in the 19th century, while the older agricultural economy left scattered farmsteads, former weavers’ cottages and signs of quarrying and mining. These days, people come for Rivington Pike, Lever Park, the terraced gardens, walking routes and the sense of heritage. Cafes and tea rooms pick up that steady visitor trade, so Rivington feels peaceful without feeling cut off. For many buyers, the pull is simple, countryside, architecture and history in the same small place.
The views are only part of the buying decision here. Wider ground conditions include sandstone, shales and clay, which can bring localised movement risk, and the area’s mining history is another reason to take an older plot seriously. Flood and drainage searches also deserve proper attention, with the River Yarrow forming the northern boundary, the River Douglas helping to mark the southern edge, and reservoirs close to the village. None of that means a buyer should walk away. It does mean our surveyors and conveyancers have useful work to do before value becomes clear.

School choice is affected by Rivington’s size. The research confirms a local school in the village, but it does not give a verified list of every nearby primary or secondary, so current catchments need checking before you commit to a particular address. Many families widen the map to Chorley, Horwich and other nearby settlements, because a short rural drive can still put you in a different admissions position. If school allocation is central to the move, it pays to look early rather than after an offer has gone in.
For parents, the nearest postcode is only the start of the question. No verified Ofsted grades were supplied in the research, so we would check the latest inspection reports for each school and confirm the exact boundary for the property you are considering. Sixth form and further education choices are usually part of the wider Chorley and Lancashire network, which may mean older pupils travelling beyond the parish. A viewing should not just be about the kitchen and garden here, it should include the school run, winter roads and the practical route out.
Family buyers are often drawn less by a dense school list and more by the setting. Open space, quieter lanes away from the village core and countryside walks give children something many urban neighbourhoods cannot. The trade-off is timing. School journeys, clubs after class and weekend activities can all take more planning from a rural home. If education is a priority, we would get the mortgage agreement in principle sorted first, then pin down the school picture before making an offer.

Rivington is not a place where the railway does the heavy lifting. Most residents look to stations in Horwich, Blackrod and Chorley for services towards Manchester, Preston and other north-west destinations. A commute can work, but it is not the same as walking from the village straight onto a platform. Station parking, train frequency and the door-to-platform journey matter just as much as the headline rail route.
For day-to-day life, driving is usually the practical answer, particularly when work, school or shopping sits outside the parish. The M61 is the main motorway link towards Manchester and Preston, while local roads take you into Chorley, Horwich and the wider Bolton edge. Around popular walking spots, weekend traffic can build and parking on narrow lanes can feel tight, especially near visitor hot spots and conservation streets. Walking and cycling are part of Rivington’s appeal, but more as lifestyle advantages than full commuting substitutes.
Buses are there, but this is not a dense town-centre transport network. Some residents will find the services useful, although frequencies are generally lower than buyers may expect if they are moving from a larger town, and evening options can be limited. Rivington tends to suit people who can work partly from home, use a car, or plan around trains and motorway links from nearby settlements. We would always test the route at school-run time and again at rush hour, because a quiet midday viewing can flatter the journey.

Get a mortgage agreement in principle in place before you fall for a house. In a market as small as Rivington, sellers and agents will usually want to see that you are ready to move, not just interested.
Do not price a property by the village name alone. Rivington Lane, the village core and nearby Anderton can act like separate markets, so the address, plot, outlook, access and heritage setting all need weighing before you decide what feels fair.
A second visit can be more revealing than the first. See the house in daylight, then try again when the road is busier, so parking, noise and access are not judged from one quiet moment. Rural lanes, visitor pressure and school traffic can change the feel quickly.
Older stone houses, listed buildings and homes near moorland or former mining ground deserve a careful look. A RICS survey can help pick up damp, roof defects, movement, patch repairs or maintenance issues before you are too far into the purchase.
Our solicitors would want to check title, rights of way, conservation area controls, listed status and any searches that affect the land. In Rivington, heritage restrictions and drainage questions can carry as much weight as the agreed price.
After the lender is satisfied and the legal work is ready, exchange of contracts sets the deal in motion and completion can be fixed. Keep removals, buildings insurance and final meter readings organised, so moving day does not become a scramble.
Heritage is the big buying theme in Rivington, and it brings rules as well as charm. The village is a designated Conservation Area, and many properties are listed, so changes to windows, roofs, doors and stonework may need consent rather than a straightforward like-for-like replacement. Planning history, previous permissions and title papers are worth reading closely when two houses appear similar. A simple-looking cottage on viewing can become more complicated once the legal checks begin.
Damp and roof condition should move high up the checklist for older stone homes. Gritstone walls, slate roofs and generations of alterations can conceal penetrating damp, slipped slates, failing flashing or timber decay that will not show during a quick walk-round. The ground deserves attention too, as clay and shale in the area can contribute to movement in some circumstances, and the mining history adds another layer of risk to inspect. If you are buying a flat or conversion, we would also look closely at service charges, ground rent and lease length.
Flooding and drainage are not background details in this parish. Reservoirs sit close to Rivington, the River Yarrow and River Douglas define parts of the boundary, and the moorland edge can mean surface water after heavy rain. A local surveyor will also check boundary walls, access, footpaths and whether outbuildings appear to have the right permissions. Once those points are understood, an offer usually feels less speculative because the likely cost of ownership is clearer.

homedata.co.uk records put the average house price in Rivington at £740,000 over the last year. That figure is 78% up on the previous year, but still 38% below the 2022 peak of £1,200,000. The road-level spread is just as important, which is why Rivington Lane and the village core should not be treated as one identical market.
Council tax is property-specific here. Rivington does not have one band that applies across the village, because each home is assessed by the local authority according to the individual property, its size and its valuation history. Check the listing, conveyancing papers and council tax page for the exact address before setting your budget.
The research confirms a local school in the village, but it does not give verified names or inspection grades for nearby schools. In practice, families tend to compare primaries and secondaries across Chorley, Horwich and the surrounding area, especially because rural catchments can be tight. Current Ofsted reports and admissions maps should be checked against the exact postcode under consideration.
Rail is not Rivington’s strongest feature. The village is better known for roads, walking routes and countryside access, with most residents using nearby stations in Horwich, Blackrod or Chorley for trains towards Manchester, Preston and other north-west destinations. Bus services exist, although they are less frequent than in larger towns, so a car remains part of daily life for many buyers.
It can make sense, provided you see it as a specialised market. Limited supply, scenery and a high proportion of historic homes all support values, but the small pool of comparable sales can make resale timing harder to judge. Many buyers approach Rivington as a long-term lifestyle move first and an investment second, which suits a village where heritage carries so much of the value.
For a main home bought at £740,000, the 2024-25 stamp duty calculation is based on 0% up to £250,000 and 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, giving a bill of £24,500 before any other costs. First-time buyer relief only applies up to £625,000, so it would not reduce the tax at this purchase price. An additional property would attract a surcharge, which would push the bill higher.
We have not seen a clearly verified active new-build scheme within the Rivington village boundary. Barton Quarter in nearby Horwich forms part of the wider Rivington Chase regeneration story, but it is best viewed as a neighbouring option rather than a Rivington address. Buyers focused on the village itself are more likely to find older stone houses, conversions and heritage property than brand-new estate stock.
Begin with the roof, gutters, pointing and any sign of damp. Slate and stone properties can be good at hiding maintenance issues, so the obvious charm is not the whole story. Then ask whether the building is listed or within the conservation area, as that may affect future alterations and repair costs. In a village like this, a surveyor who knows traditional Lancashire housing is a sensible choice.
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Stamp duty needs proper budgeting here because typical prices already sit well above the first-time buyer relief threshold. For the 2024-25 tax year, the standard rates are 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. First-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. On a £740,000 main-residence purchase, that makes the stamp duty bill £24,500 before any surcharge.
SDLT is only one part of the buying cost, especially with older heritage stock. Allow for mortgage fees, valuation or survey fees, solicitor’s charges, searches, insurance from exchange, removals and any first repairs flagged after the survey. Conservation-area houses can also cost more if windows, roofs or stonework need specialist materials or consent-led work. Plan the numbers early and it becomes much easier to judge whether a striking stone house is truly affordable once every cost is counted.

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