Try adjusting your filters or searching a wider area.
Search homes new builds in Bilton, East Riding of Yorkshire. New listings are added daily by local developer agents.
£200k
11
0
163
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Semi-Detached
3 listings
Avg £256,650
Detached
2 listings
Avg £273,475
Semi-Detached Bungalow
2 listings
Avg £189,975
Detached Bungalow
1 listings
Avg £400,000
End of Terrace
1 listings
Avg £180,000
Link Detached House
1 listings
Avg £199,950
Terraced
1 listings
Avg £160,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
The sold-price evidence supplied relates to Bilton in Rugby, not Bilton in East Riding, so we are treating it as a comparison market rather than a direct match. homedata.co.uk records a 12-month average sold price of £278,245 for that Bilton market, with detached homes achieving the highest average at £401,259. Semi-detached homes averaged £268,822, terraced properties £214,393 and flats £135,920. Taken together, that range points to a market that can serve both family buyers and those seeking a smaller, lower-entry home.
Movement in the surrounding data is solid too. Over the last 12 months, the wider Rugby area saw 857 residential sales, and Bilton, Rugby, recorded 1,031 properties sold over 10 years. Adjacent postcode figures also show price growth, with CV22 6 up 5.1% over the last year and CV22 7DX on Bilton Road up 9% year on year, including a 4% rise above the 2023 peak of £219,950. It is not an East Riding Bilton sales record, but it does indicate that well-kept homes in an attractive village setting can hold value. In practice, the homes that tend to draw the quickest interest are usually the best-presented ones, especially where there is parking, a decent garden and modernised interiors.
We did not find any verified new-build development detail in the supplied research for Bilton, East Riding. In most cases, that shifts attention onto established housing stock, where period character, room proportions and maintenance history matter every bit as much as the asking price. The listings data we have reviewed shows traditional brick-built homes appearing regularly, which is usually a positive sign for buyers who want solid construction and straightforward resale appeal. Where a property has already been extended or refurbished, we would always want the paperwork to match what is on site.

Bilton in East Riding of Yorkshire has the sort of village feel many buyers want when they are trying to step away from a busier pace of life. The housing notes supplied suggest a blend of traditional brick properties and more modernised family homes, so the streetscape is not all one thing. That mix can work well for different households, from someone buying a first terrace to a family looking for a larger detached home. It also means one road can feel quite different from the next.
A quieter residential setting here does not automatically mean being cut off. The East Riding and Hull area still gives buyers access to shops, services, work and leisure without the constant tempo of a city centre, and that balance is a big part of the appeal for people who work in Hull but want to return to calmer streets and a sense of more space. Day-to-day practicalities matter, mind you, including driveways, garden size, bus access and how simple it is to reach the essentials. For a long stay, we would pick the street that suits your routine, not just the property that photographs best.

We have not been supplied with verified school performance data for Bilton in East Riding, so the sensible route is to check the exact catchment for the address before any offer goes in. Across East Riding, families often compare nearby primaries, secondary options and transport links at the same time, because one side of a boundary line can fall into a different school area from the next road. Where schooling matters, ask the agent for the precise postcode and then confirm it with the local authority and the schools themselves. A little checking up front can spare a lot of stress later.
With older children, the journey can matter just as much as the rating. A house may look right on paper, then become awkward in real life if the bus is infrequent, the route needs several changes or the school run means squeezing into tight roads for parking. Sixth-form and further-education options deserve the same attention, especially where a child is more likely to move on to college than stay within the same school system. We always see better decisions when the school search is handled as part of the house search, not left until after an offer is accepted.
In family homes that have been altered over time, a Level 2 survey is often particularly useful. An extension or conversion can present well while still concealing damp, roof or timber defects, and that sort of due diligence helps protect both budget and routine once a move is under way. Unexpected repairs are far harder to deal with when everything else is already in motion. A clear survey can also put us in a stronger position if work is needed before the property is properly safe, warm or ready for family life.

Bilton is easiest to think of as a road-led location, with local bus links doing much of the everyday work. For rail travel, most people would head into Hull for broader regional and long-distance services, which keeps the village practical for commuters happy to combine a short drive or bus journey with the train. That arrangement suits plenty of buyers who want a quieter base and only need the city a few times each week. Parking matters more, though, when a station run is part of the plan or there is more than one car to manage.
For longer journeys, Hull provides routes towards Leeds, York and London, so the area can still work for employment or family travel beyond East Yorkshire. Just as important is the road run into Hull itself, because a straightforward link to the main routes can make a real difference on weekday mornings. Anyone cycling should check how the roads feel at rush hour and whether the property has somewhere secure for bikes, prams or outdoor kit. We would always test the trip at the time you would usually leave rather than relying on a map alone.
Roads, parking, local amenities and school catchments are all worth checking closely, because homes in Bilton can feel surprisingly different even over a short distance.
Before we book viewings, it makes sense to have a mortgage agreement in principle in place so you can move quickly when the right house appears.
Try visiting at more than one time of day. Traffic, on-street parking, drainage, garden orientation and the general standard of upkeep can look quite different once the area is busy.
For most standard homes, a RICS Level 2 survey is the right fit, especially with older brick properties or houses that have been extended.
We would ask the conveyancer to review title, boundaries, fixtures, rights of way and any leasehold points as early as possible.
Once searches, mortgage arrangements and enquiries are all clear, the next step is to exchange contracts and then complete on the agreed date, with the removal plan organised in advance.
The supplied research does not name a conservation area, flood zone or special geological issue for Bilton in East Riding, which means each property still needs careful individual scrutiny. The housing data we have points to plenty of traditional brick-built homes, and that often suggests a sound structure where maintenance has been kept up. Still, we would want to look for cracked render, failing pointing, tired roofs, blocked gutters and any sign of damp around older extensions or chimney breasts. For many houses of this kind, a Level 2 survey is a sensible middle course.
Flats and maisonettes call for extra attention on the legal side. Service charges, ground rent, lease length and management-company arrangements can shift the real monthly outlay quite sharply, even where the asking price looks appealing. Freehold houses are usually simpler in paperwork terms, but shared drives, access paths and private maintenance setups still need proper checks. Where a seller has carried out works, we would want building control approvals, guarantees and planning paperwork before committing.
Anyone planning to extend or rework a house should also ask about planning history and any restrictions affecting the plot. A big garden, a driveway or a loft can look like future value, but those features only really deliver where the title, layout and services make the idea workable. It is also wise to allow for immediate spending on electrics, heating, insulation or decoration, because homes in established areas are often sold with scope for improvement. Usually, the better purchase is the one that matches both the budget and the amount of work you are genuinely prepared to take on.
The sold-price data supplied does not directly cover Bilton in East Riding of Yorkshire. The verified Bilton dataset available to us is for Bilton in Rugby, Warwickshire, where homedata.co.uk shows an average sold price of £278,245 across the last 12 months. In that same dataset, detached homes average £401,259, semi-detached homes £268,822, terraced homes £214,393 and flats £135,920. For current asking prices in Bilton, our search on home.co.uk is the best reference point for comparing live stock.
Council tax banding comes down to the individual property rather than the village name alone. In Bilton, East Riding of Yorkshire, homes fall under East Riding of Yorkshire Council, so the band reflects the specific valuation of the house or flat. Across most places, you will find properties spanning Bands A to H depending on size and value. We would check the listing, the council tax bill and the solicitor’s search results before settling the budget.
The supplied research does not provide verified school data or catchment maps for Bilton in East Riding. Because of that, the exact postcode should be checked with East Riding of Yorkshire Council, and we would also speak to the schools direct before any offer is made. Families often weigh up primary and secondary choices together, along with sixth-form or college routes where older children are part of the picture. A home can seem ideal until the boundary is confirmed.
As a place to live, Bilton is better viewed as road-first, with local bus services carrying much of the day-to-day load. Rail users generally go into Hull for broader regional and long-distance connections, so the area remains workable for commuters content to combine a short local journey with the train. Where public transport is central to the plan, test the route at the exact time work or school travel would happen. That gives a truer picture than any timetable snapshot.
Long-term buyers are likely to see the appeal here in family-friendly homes, usable gardens and practical links to Hull and the East Riding. The comparison market in the supplied data points to steady sales activity and positive recent postcode growth, which is encouraging, though that evidence comes from Bilton in Rugby rather than Bilton in East Riding. Actual investment value will turn on the specific road, the condition, the parking and how straightforward the home is to let or resell. Over time, the properties with the broadest appeal tend to fare best.
For most buyers in England, stamp duty is charged at 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, then 5% from £425,001 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. Using the £278,245 comparison price from homedata.co.uk, a standard buyer would pay £1,412.25, because only the portion above £250,000 is taxed at 5%. At that same level, a first-time buyer would normally pay no stamp duty.
We found no verified active new-build developments in the supplied research for Bilton, East Riding. That points most buyers back towards established homes, including traditional brick properties and modernised family houses. Anyone specifically after a new-build style purchase may need to widen the search into the broader East Riding and Hull area. Even so, an established home can still represent very good value where the updating has been done well.
We strongly recommend a survey, particularly where the property is older, extended or has been improved in phases. For many conventional homes, a RICS Level 2 survey is the sensible option, while a more detailed survey can be the better call if the house is unusual or obvious defects are showing. Older brick homes can conceal damp, roof or timber problems that do not stand out at first viewing. A good report gives us confidence, and sometimes room to negotiate as well.
Stamp duty in England is now 0% up to £250,000 for most buyers, then 5% from £250,001 to £925,000, 10% from £925,001 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. First-time buyers receive 0% up to £425,000 and then 5% from £425,001 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. On the £278,245 comparison price from homedata.co.uk, a standard buyer would pay £1,412.25 in stamp duty because only the amount above £250,000 is charged at 5%. Once the likely purchase price is clear, the budgeting is fairly straightforward.
At that price, first-time buyers would not normally pay stamp duty, which can make a real difference when move-in costs are tight. There are still other costs to allow for, though, including a survey, solicitor fees, mortgage arrangement charges, removals and any work needed after the keys are handed over. For a second home or a buy-to-let, a higher-rate surcharge may apply, so we would get the figures checked early before fixing the budget. A mortgage agreement in principle, along with a clear cash reserve, usually makes the whole purchase easier to manage.
Properties New Builds In London

Properties New Builds In Plymouth

Properties New Builds In Liverpool

Properties New Builds In Glasgow

Properties New Builds In Sheffield

Properties New Builds In Edinburgh

Properties New Builds In Coventry

Properties New Builds In Bradford

Properties New Builds In Manchester

Properties New Builds In Birmingham

Properties New Builds In Bristol

Properties New Builds In Oxford

Properties New Builds In Leicester

Properties New Builds In Newcastle

Properties New Builds In Leeds

Properties New Builds In Southampton

Properties New Builds In Cardiff

Properties New Builds In Nottingham

Properties New Builds In Norwich

Properties New Builds In Brighton

Properties New Builds In Derby

Properties New Builds In Portsmouth

Properties New Builds In Northampton

Properties New Builds In Milton Keynes

Properties New Builds In Bournemouth

Properties New Builds In Bolton

Properties New Builds In Swansea

Properties New Builds In Swindon

Properties New Builds In Peterborough

Properties New Builds In Wolverhampton

Enter your details to see if this property is within your budget.
Loans, cards, car finance
Estimated property budget
Borrowing + deposit
You could borrow between
Typical borrowing
Monthly repayment
Est. at 4.5%
Loan-to-value
This is an estimate only. Your actual budget may vary depending on interest rates, credit history, and personal circumstances. For an accurate affordability assessment, speak to one of our free mortgage advisors.
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.
Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.