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Search homes new builds in Balsham, South Cambridgeshire. New listings are added daily by local developer agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Balsham housing market, offering space for families with multiple reception rooms and gardens in many cases. Browse detached, semi-detached, and terraced options ranging across new residential developments.
£435k
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Source: home.co.uk
Showing 2 results for 3 Bedroom Houses new builds in Balsham, South Cambridgeshire. The median asking price is £435,000.
Source: home.co.uk
Detached
2 listings
Avg £435,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Balsham has seen a clear price correction over the past year, with average values down 11% on the previous year and now 9% beneath the 2022 peak of £525,439. For buyers who were shut out at the top of the market, that opens a window. homedata.co.uk currently records an average sold price of £525,439 from Land Registry data, and home.co.uk shows 429 sold property records for the area, which points to a market that is still moving despite wider uncertainty. Well-priced homes are likely to draw the quickest response.
Most transactions in Balsham are for semi-detached homes, a pattern that reflects the village’s mid-twentieth century expansion. Detached properties sit at the top end, averaging £691,250, and they tend to appeal to families wanting more room and larger gardens. Semi-detached homes average £446,000, while terraced properties come in at around £159,995, so there are still lower entry points for first-time buyers or investors. On top of that, the village includes individual executive homes, such as a contemporary detached property on High Street listed at £1,212,500 and a four-bedroom family home completed in 2021.
Within Balsham itself, new build supply is thin, with most development taking place in Cambridge and the surrounding villages. Even so, a freehold building plot with planning permission for a charming single-storey two-bedroom bungalow was recently advertised in Balsham, which will interest self-build buyers. We have also seen one-off completions at a higher standard, including a link-detached home completed by Hill Residential in 2019, showing that quality housing does still appear inside the village boundary. Buyers chasing modern specification and better energy performance may want to watch these rare opportunities closely, or look a little further afield.

Set in South Cambridgeshire, Balsham occupies a calm spot in the East Anglian countryside, around eight miles southeast of Cambridge city centre. The village sits on chalk geology typical of this part of Cambridgeshire, with clay deposits underneath that can affect foundations and garden drainage. Around it, gentle hills and open farmland create the backdrop for walks and cycling, which is part of the appeal for people who enjoy the outdoors. The population of 3,594 gives Balsham a lively but manageable feel, where people know one another and local events still matter.
There is a useful spread of everyday amenities here, including a primary school, a village pub, and community facilities that cover the basics without a trip into a larger town. Housing is largely owner-occupied, and in the CB21 4LD postcode area semi-detached homes make up around 62% of the stock, which tells us something about the settled, long-term nature of the community. Balsham Place, a Grade II listed country house dating to approximately 1827 with its distinctive dated stone doorway, sits alongside the Church of the Holy Trinity, which carries Grade I listed status. Historic buildings have also found new uses, and Aisle Barn, now operating as a commercial office space, is a good example of the sympathetic reuse that marks the village.
Commuting to Cambridge and the surrounding employment hubs drives most of the local economy, which fits Balsham’s role as a dormitory village. There is some business activity too, helped by barn conversions and similar office uses, while Newmarket and Haverhill widen the employment options. The surrounding countryside supports agriculture, but the main pull remains Cambridge’s knowledge economy, including the science parks and biomedical campus.

Balsham’s primary school is the centre of its education provision, giving younger families a local starting point. Secondary places are usually found in nearby towns, and there are several respected choices within a reasonable commute. South Cambridgeshire generally posts strong attainment results, but families moving here should still check catchment areas and admissions rules for their chosen schools. Because of the village location, school transport and journey times are often part of the decision-making process.
From Balsham, secondary options include schools in Cambridge and the nearby market towns, and many parents make the city run for education. The wider Cambridge area also brings grammar schools, independent schools, and sixth form colleges into reach. It is sensible to check current Ofsted ratings and admission policies, since both can shift and may affect values on particular streets or in certain pockets. Families who want the widest choice usually benefit from viewing early, giving themselves time for school applications and, if needed, appeals.
Cambridge’s proximity also opens the door to further and higher education, with Cambridge University colleges and the Cambridge campuses of Anglia Ruskin University both within easy reach. That makes Balsham appealing to families who are planning ahead. For younger children, the village primary school usually feeds into secondary schools serving South Cambridgeshire, and school links often become part of how people settle into the community.

Because Balsham works as a dormitory settlement for Cambridge, transport links matter a great deal for buyers commuting into the city or further afield. The village is about eight miles from Cambridge city centre, and the drive usually takes 20-30 minutes depending on traffic. The A1307 gives direct access towards Cambridge, while the A11 and M11 motorway network connects to Stansted Airport, London, and the Midlands. Bus services link Balsham with Cambridge and nearby market towns, although frequencies are not as generous as those in urban areas.
From Cambridge railway station, trains run regularly to London Liverpool Street in about one hour, with other services to Birmingham, Norwich, and further major destinations. For people working in Cambridge, the science parks and biomedical campus can be reached via the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway, which links into Park and Ride sites. Cyclists benefit from the fairly flat East Anglian landscape, and new cycle routes are being added across the region to support greener travel. Parking in Balsham is usually adequate for a village of this size, though school pick-up and drop-off times can make spaces harder to find.
Anyone relying on buses should bear in mind that services usually follow weekday commuter patterns, with lower frequency at weekends and during school holidays. It is worth checking live timetables in travel planning apps before committing to a purchase. Stansted Airport is reachable via the M11 in around 40 minutes, and London Stansted offers domestic and European flights.

Before booking a viewing, spend time in Balsham at different points in the day and week so you get a feel for the pace, traffic, and background noise. Call in at the village shop, the pub, and the community centre, and see whether they fit the way you live. A walk around the streets, plus a few conversations with residents, will tell you more than any listing text can.
Speak to a mortgage broker or lender and get an agreement in principle before you start viewing. That gives your offer more weight and shows sellers that we are dealing with a buyer who can actually complete. Brokers who know Cambridgeshire values can also give a more realistic view of borrowing power.
We would work with local estate agents who understand the Balsham market properly. View more than one property, including different ages and styles, and pay close attention to build quality, upkeep, and the state of roofs, windows, and heating systems in older homes. Photographs and quick notes taken during each viewing make comparison much easier afterwards.
After an offer is accepted, arrange a homebuyers survey with a qualified RICS surveyor. Balsham has plenty of older housing and listed buildings, so this is the stage where structural issues, damp, roofing problems, and electrical faults can come to light before you commit. For older homes or non-standard construction, our team can point you towards the most suitable survey level for the property in question.
Choose a conveyancing specialist who knows Cambridgeshire transactions well to deal with the legal transfer. They will run searches, review the contract, and handle the paperwork needed to complete the purchase. Familiarity with South Cambridgeshire District Council procedures can help move matters along more smoothly.
Your solicitor will then work with the seller’s legal team to exchange contracts, and that is the point where the deal becomes legally binding. Completion usually follows within 7-28 days, when the keys are handed over and the Balsham home becomes yours. Buildings insurance needs to be in place from exchange of contracts onwards.
Balsham’s heritage means many properties are listed, which brings restrictions on alterations, renovations, and even routine maintenance. Anyone looking at older homes on High Street or West Wratting Road should check the listed status and understand the implications before going further. Works to listed structures usually need Listed Building Consent from South Cambridgeshire District Council, which can add both time and cost to improvements. Traditional materials, including timber framing and thatch in some older properties, may also affect insurance premiums and future maintenance budgets.
Older Cambridgeshire homes often come with familiar issues, damp penetration, ageing plumbing, dated wiring, and roof problems among them, all of which a careful survey should pick up. Original single-pane windows may need upgrading to improve energy performance, while timber-framed buildings can show woodworm or wet rot that needs specialist treatment. Because the area sits on chalk and clay geology, some plots have shallower foundations than we would expect today, so signs of subsidence, such as cracking walls or doors that stick, deserve proper attention.
Homes built before 1999 may contain asbestos in insulation, floor tiles, or pipe lagging, and if it is disturbed it must be removed by licensed contractors. Our inspectors also come across outdated electrical systems in period properties, including old fuse boards and too few sockets for modern households. A RICS Level 2 Survey before completion gives useful leverage if defects appear, since it can support a renegotiation of the price or a request for the seller to deal with the issue first.

Recent sales data puts the average property price in Balsham at £525,439. Detached homes averaged £691,250, semi-detached properties were around £446,000, and terraced homes came in at approximately £159,995. Prices are 11% lower than the previous year and currently sit 9% below the 2022 peak of £525,439, so buyers entering the market now may find better value. homedata.co.uk records a slightly higher average of £525,439 based on Land Registry data, although that can lag current market conditions by up to three months.
Balsham properties sit within South Cambridgeshire District Council’s area. Council tax bands run from A through H depending on assessed value, although most homes in the village are banded between B and E. Buyers should always check the exact band with the local authority, since it affects annual running costs and feeds into the overall purchase budget. The band can also be checked online through the Valuation Office Agency website using the property address.
There is a village primary school for local families, and several well-regarded secondary schools can be reached from Balsham. South Cambridgeshire has a strong reputation for educational performance, but we would still advise checking current Ofsted ratings and admission catchments, both of which are available on the Ofsted website. Cambridge brings more choices, including grammar schools and independent schools for those looking for specialist provision, and some secondary schools mean a regular 20-30 minute journey from the village.
Bus links connect Balsham with Cambridge and nearby towns such as Newmarket, although the service is thinner than in town and usually follows weekday commuter hours. Cambridge station is the nearest rail hub, with regular trains to London Liverpool Street in around one hour, and fewer services at weekends. For anyone depending on public transport, current timetables and journey planning apps should be checked before a purchase, since service patterns do change.
Balsham’s closeness to Cambridge keeps demand steady from commuters and families who want village life with city access. The limited amount of new-build development in the village helps existing stock hold its appeal. Character homes with decent gardens and a walkable route to the village amenities usually retain value well, which is why Balsham attracts both owner-occupiers and investors looking for long-term growth. There is also rental demand from Cambridge professionals who prefer a village setting to an urban flat.
Stamp Duty Land Tax applies to every property purchase in England. The standard rates begin at 0% on the first £250,000, then rise to 5% on the slice between £250,001 and £925,000, 10% up to £1.5 million, and 12% above £1.5 million. First-time buyers get relief on the first £425,000, pay 5% between £425,001 and £625,000, and receive no relief above that level. On the average Balsham price of £525,439, a first-time buyer would pay about £2,543 in stamp duty after relief, while a buyer who already owns property would pay around £11,293.
For most Balsham homes, we would suggest a RICS Level 2 Survey, which generally costs between £380 and £629 depending on size and value. Properties above £525,439 average around £586, while homes under £180,000 start from roughly £376. Because the village contains a substantial amount of older housing and a number of listed buildings, a detailed survey is especially useful for spotting damp, movement, and dated electrical systems. Where the property is complex or historic, a RICS Level 3 Building Survey gives a fuller picture.
New build supply inside Balsham remains limited, with most new development taking place in Cambridge and the surrounding villages. A freehold building plot with planning permission for a single-storey two-bedroom bungalow was recently advertised in Balsham, which should interest self-build buyers. There are also individual high-specification completions, including a contemporary detached property on High Street listed at £1,212,500 and a four-bedroom family home built in 2021. Buyers set on new-build specification may want to look at nearby schemes in Cambridge and Sawston as well.
From £380
A detailed inspection that picks up defects, well suited to most Balsham homes
From £629
A fuller structural survey, usually the better choice for older or listed properties
From £85
An energy performance certificate, needed for every property sale
From £499
Legal transfer of ownership handling
From 4.5%
Finance options from trusted lenders
Budgeting for a Balsham purchase means looking beyond the asking price. Stamp Duty Land Tax works on a tiered basis, with the first £250,000 charged at 0%, the next £675,000 at 5%, and anything above £925,000 taxed at 10% or 12%. For a typical semi-detached home in Balsham priced at £446,000, a first-time buyer would pay around £178 in stamp duty after the first-time buyer threshold, while a buyer who already owns a property would pay about £8,928. Executive homes priced above £925,000 bring much larger SDLT bills, so they need to be included in financial planning from the start.
Other purchase costs matter too, including solicitor fees usually between £500 and £1,500 depending on complexity, survey costs of £380 and £629 for a RICS Level 2 report, and search fees of around £250-400 for local authority and environmental checks. Mortgage arrangement fees, valuation fees, and broker charges can add another £500-2,000. Buildings insurance must be in place from exchange of contracts, and removals costs vary based on volume and
In Balsham’s older housing stock, survey findings can bring extra costs in the form of renovation work. Properties with listed building status need Listed Building Consent for alterations, which means application fees and, often, longer lead times for the work itself. Energy efficiency upgrades, such as improving insulation or replacing single-pane windows, may require investment up front, but they can cut ongoing utility costs significantly in this rural setting where heating bills form a notable share of household spending.

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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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