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Search homes new builds in CH63. New listings are added daily by local developer agents.
One bed apartments provide a separate bedroom alongside distinct living space, bathroom, and kitchen areas. Properties in CH63 are available in various building types including new apartment complexes and contemporary developments.
£118k
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Source: home.co.uk
Showing 1 results for 1 Bedroom Flats new builds in CH63. The median asking price is £117,500.
Source: home.co.uk
Flat
1 listings
Avg £117,500
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
CH63 has a wide housing mix, though family houses clearly set the tone. Local housing insight points to around 55% of homes being semi-detached, about 30% detached, roughly 5% terraced and around 10% in other categories such as flats and maisonettes. That goes a long way towards explaining why semis feature so strongly here, and why buyers so often weigh them up against detached homes when they want more room without stretching too far on price. We see CH63 as a practical market, not a speculative one, which tends to suit buyers planning to settle for years rather than months.
Prices have moved the right way here too. homedata.co.uk records show CH63 sold prices are 8% higher than a year ago and 4% above the 2022 peak of £278,560. Detached homes, at £397,014, sit comfortably above the overall average, while flats at £125,708 still offer the easiest way into the postcode for many buyers. There is also fresh stock coming through, with Lottie Gardens in Bebington offering one-bedroom apartments from £185,000, three-bedroom semis from £369,995 and four-bedroom detached homes from £449,995. Between the older housing and the newer schemes, CH63 stays relevant for movers and investors alike.

More than anything, CH63 feels settled. It is closely tied to Bebington and Port Sunlight, where traditional brick houses, open green spaces and a strong local identity shape the look and feel of the area. Port Sunlight model village stands out in particular, with its rich heritage setting and many listed buildings, which give it a character that is hard to match in a more standard suburban postcode. For buyers drawn to architecture and a quieter pace, this part of CH63 often becomes the main attraction.
Practical living counts for just as much as kerb appeal, and CH63 holds up well on that front. Shops, schools and everyday services are close at hand, which makes family life easier, while the wider Wirral opens up extra retail, leisure and healthcare choices without a long trip. The housing mix helps too, because semi-detached and detached homes are far more common than high-density blocks. For buyers wanting space, familiar neighbourhood surroundings and a place that still feels plugged into the rest of the peninsula, it is a sensible balance.

For families searching in CH63, school choices usually need checking early. The postcode sits within Wirral, so parents often compare local primaries, secondary schools and selective options across the borough before deciding where to buy. We always suggest treating the school search as part of the property search, not as something to leave until an offer is already agreed. If education is a key reason for moving, short-listing homes only after reviewing the latest admissions arrangements and catchment maps is the safer way to go.
Not every buyer wants the same kind of school, and CH63 gives access to a fairly broad picture. Primaries in and around Bebington and Port Sunlight are part of the draw for younger families, while older pupils can look across the wider Wirral secondary offer as well as nearby sixth-form or college routes. Admissions rules and boundaries do change, so we think it is best to confirm the latest position with each school and the local authority before you start booking viewings. A little groundwork at that stage can save a lot of frustration later on.

One of CH63’s clearest strengths is transport. Bebington and Port Sunlight give the postcode rail links across the Wirral and towards Liverpool, and drivers have straightforward access to the main cross-peninsula routes and the M53 corridor. That works well for people splitting their week between local work, city-centre jobs and hybrid commuting. If convenience matters nearly as much as lifestyle, CH63 is well worth a look.
Rail is only one part of daily travel. Parking and the road layout can make just as much difference, especially on older streets, in heritage pockets and along denser residential roads where on-street space may be tighter than buyers expect. It is worth checking that during a viewing rather than assuming there will be room outside every home. Bus services connect the local centres as well, which helps households that do not want to rely on a car for every journey. In practice, CH63 tends to suit buyers who want a commuter base with enough nearby amenity to keep extra trips down.
We suggest starting with a mortgage agreement in principle, so your budget is clear and you can move quickly when the right home comes up.
Try Bebington, Port Sunlight and the nearby pockets at different times of day, so you get a proper feel for traffic, parking and local noise.
Inside each property, look closely at condition, layout, light and storage, and if a flat is on your list, ask straight away about the leasehold terms.
For many standard CH63 homes, a RICS Level 2 survey is the right fit, but older or listed properties may call for a more detailed Level 3 report.
Once an offer starts to look serious, pick a conveyancer so the searches, enquiries and contract checks can get under way without delay.
Have your deposit funds, ID and mortgage paperwork ready, then start organising removals and utilities once our legal team has a confirmed completion date.
Because CH63 covers both straightforward family housing and heritage-led homes, the type of building should influence the checks you carry out before buying. Standard brick semis and detached houses will often suit a RICS Level 2 survey, but older Port Sunlight properties and any listed buildings may warrant a Level 3, as construction details, repair history and ongoing maintenance can all be more involved. We recommend asking early about alterations, roof work, window replacements and any planning or conservation constraints, since each of those can affect cost and future options. A survey should do more than flag defects, it should also help you judge the long-term running cost of the home.
Flats and apartments need their own set of checks, particularly where service charges, ground rent and lease length come into play. Buyers should find out what the charge covers, whether major works are expected and how the lease terms could affect mortgageability. With freehold houses, we would focus more on extensions, loft conversions, signs of damp, boundary positions and any changes that may need formal sign-off. CH63 also includes older homes and heritage pockets, so it makes sense to get searches, a survey and solicitor checks moving early rather than leaving everything until the last stretch.
Over the last 12 months, homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price in CH63 of £284,093. Detached homes average £397,014, semi-detached homes £267,791, terraces £191,241 and flats £125,708. That gives the postcode a decent spread, from lower-cost flats through to larger family houses. Prices are also 8% up year on year, pointing to steady demand rather than a one-off spike.
Within CH63, council tax falls under Wirral Council and follows the usual A to H bands. The exact band will depend on the individual property, its size and its valuation history, so we always advise checking the specific listing rather than guessing from the street alone. Even homes close together can vary, with flats, terraces and detached houses often sitting in quite different bands. Before making an offer, build that council tax figure into your monthly budget so you have a fuller picture of ownership costs.
School research in CH63 often starts with local primaries in Bebington and Port Sunlight, then widens out to the broader Wirral secondary and sixth-form options. The exact address matters, because admissions and catchments can shift over time. We would always check the latest catchment maps before an offer goes in. That matters even more when school access is one of the main drivers behind the move.
For getting around, CH63 is in a handy spot. Bebington and Port Sunlight both offer useful station access for commuters, and the M53 corridor helps drivers reach other parts of the Wirral and the wider Liverpool City Region. Bus services also run between the neighbourhoods, so a car is not essential for every trip. Many buyers find that combination works well for work and family routines.
Investors often like what CH63 offers. There is steady owner-occupier demand, a strong family housing mix and encouraging price movement, with homedata.co.uk records showing values 8% higher than a year ago. New-build homes from £185,000 upwards widen the market further, and places such as Port Sunlight bring heritage appeal that can attract buyers looking for character. Still, the basic rule does not change, the stronger outcomes usually come from buying the right property at the right price, not from chasing the fastest flip.
The stamp duty bill depends on the price paid and on whether the buyer already owns another home. Under current rules, standard buyers pay 0% up to £250,000, then 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, while first-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000. Based on CH63's average sold price of £284,093, a non-first-time buyer would usually pay about £1,705 in stamp duty. A first-time buyer purchasing below £425,000 would usually pay nothing.
In CH63, a survey is usually money well spent, not least because the area includes older houses and heritage properties. A RICS Level 2 survey is often suitable for standard houses and flats in reasonable condition, while a Level 3 tends to be the better choice for older, listed or heavily altered homes. Buying in Port Sunlight or another character area can make that extra detail particularly useful. It is one of the simplest ways to avoid repair costs catching you out after completion.
The housing stock in CH63 is weighted strongly towards semi-detached homes, with around 55% semis and about 30% detached properties. Terraces make up a much smaller share, and flats and other homes account for what is left. That profile suits buyers after a traditional suburban setting with family-sized rooms and gardens. It also explains why semi-detached homes often hit the value-and-space sweet spot here.
For many CH63 buyers, stamp duty is one of the main upfront costs, so it needs to be in the budget before an offer is made. The current standard thresholds 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 relief up to £425,000, with 5% applying only between £425,000 and £625,000, and no relief above that point. Near the CH63 average sold price, the charge may be fairly modest, but it can rise quickly on a higher-value detached home.
A worked example makes it clearer. On a property priced at £284,093, a buyer who is not a first-time buyer would usually pay about £1,705 in stamp duty, because only the amount above £250,000 is charged at 5%. A first-time buyer at that price would typically pay nothing, which is one reason CH63 still appeals to people taking their first step onto the ladder. Beyond the tax, we would also budget for conveyancing, survey fees, mortgage arrangement costs, removals and any immediate work the property needs. Getting a mortgage agreement in principle sorted early helps keep those costs in view and puts you in a stronger position when the right CH63 home appears.
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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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