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Search homes new builds in Illogan, Cornwall. New listings are added daily by local developer agents.
The 2 bed flat sector typically includes two separate bedrooms, dedicated living areas, and bathroom facilities. Properties in Illogan 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 new builds in Illogan, Cornwall.
Illogan’s property market has moved a little rather than dramatically over the past year, which gives buyers both room to think and reasons to stay alert. home.co.uk listing data puts the average house price in Illogan at £298,589, with a 6% dip on the previous year and a 3% fall from the 2022 high of £307,979. At the same time, homedata.co.uk shows a 3.6% rise in sold prices across the last 12 months, pointing to a market that still has solid buyer interest behind it.
There is a decent spread of property types in Illogan, so different budgets are catered for. Detached homes sit at the top of the range with an average price of £370,541, a level that often attracts families wanting extra space and privacy. Semi-detached homes average £265,569, while terraced houses start from about £215,889, which keeps them firmly on the radar for first-time buyers. Across the wider TR16 area, buyers will also spot bungalows and the occasional flat listing.
Sales over the last year have been led by detached homes, with semi-detached and terraced properties following behind. In the village itself, Dunstan Meadows is nearing completion and brings a small, exclusive collection of homes for buyers looking for modern accommodation in this well-liked community. Looking further back, historic sales data from homedata.co.uk indicates that around 780 properties have changed hands over the past decade, which suggests steady activity in the local market.

Life in Illogan still feels rooted in the kind of Cornish village community many places have lost. Set just inland from the striking north Cornwall coast, the parish suits buyers who want countryside, sea air, and easy access to outdoor life without giving up day-to-day essentials. Village shops, traditional pubs, and local community facilities help cover practical needs and also add to the close-knit atmosphere that draws people here.
The housing in Illogan mirrors the village’s history, and that mix is a big part of its appeal. Traditional terraced cottages and Victorian-style semi-detached houses sit alongside newer schemes, so the streetscape shows how the village has changed over time rather than being built in one go. Older homes often make strong use of Cornwall’s local granite stone and slate roofs, details that tie them closely to the wider Cornish landscape.
Across the wider TR16 area, residents have plenty of scope for getting outdoors. Parks, countryside walks, and the coast are all within easy reach, and Illogan’s position in Cornwall puts a broad range of landscapes close at hand, from the rugged cliffs of the north coast to the calmer waters further south. Portreath and Porthtowan are popular for beach days, the South West Coast Path is there for longer walks, and towns such as Truro and St Ives are easy to explore before heading back to the quieter setting of the village in the evening.

Illogan’s housing stock has built up over a long period, so buyers will find several architectural eras and construction styles in one parish. Detached and semi-detached homes make up much of the village, and that usually means good internal space and gardens, both of which are highly prized in this part of Cornwall. There are terraced houses too, many from the Victorian period, and they often provide a more affordable route into the market without losing the period character many buyers want.
Many of Illogan’s older homes carry the classic Cornish combination of granite stone walls and slate roofs. Those thick walls can offer excellent thermal mass, and the roofing has often stood up to years of Atlantic weather, but age brings responsibilities. Original windows, timber sash frames, and stone pointing may all need specialist attention over time, so buyers looking at traditional properties should allow for ongoing maintenance and think seriously about booking a thorough survey before they commit.
Newer homes in Illogan come through both one-off infill builds and smaller schemes such as Dunstan Meadows. These properties usually include more recent construction standards, with features like cavity wall insulation, double glazing, and heating systems designed to meet current building regulations. Homes built after 1990 are often less demanding in maintenance terms than older stock, but we would still advise carrying out the right checks so any build-quality issues or later defects can be picked up early.
For families moving to Illogan, schooling is one of the practical points worth checking early. There are primary options within reasonable reach for children from reception to Year 6, serving both the village and nearby communities. Illogan Highway Primary School is the main primary school for the village and is well known locally. Catchment boundaries and admission rules matter here, though, so we always suggest looking closely at both before choosing a property.
For older children, the choice widens into the surrounding towns. Humphry Davy School in nearby Penzance and Camborne Science and International Academy both serve the broader area, with GCSE and A-Level courses alongside extracurricular activities that support wider development. Preschool and nursery provision is also available in and around the village, giving families with younger children options for early years education close to home.
Further and higher education are accessible without having to leave Cornwall behind. Truro College offers a broad mix of vocational and academic courses, while Falmouth University provides degree programmes in creative arts, business, and humanities. For young people growing up in Illogan, that means viable routes into continued study in Truro and Falmouth without an automatic move to a larger city. For many families, that matters.

Getting in and out of Illogan is usually straightforward, which is one reason the village works for people who want a quieter home base without feeling cut off. It sits in the TR16 postcode area and has road links to Camborne, Redruth, and Truro. The A30 trunk road runs through the wider area, giving a direct route towards Exeter and further afield, and First Kernow bus services connect Illogan with nearby villages and commercial centres for those who are not relying on a car.
Rail commuters tend to use Camborne or Redruth, both of which sit on the main Cornish line. From these stations, services run to Plymouth, Exeter, and London Paddington, with the trip from Camborne to London Paddington taking about four and a half hours. That is manageable for occasional business travel, while still allowing residents to come back to Cornwall and enjoy village life at the end of the week.
Illogan’s position near the Cornwall coast also keeps longer-distance travel within reach. Newquay Airport has flights to a range of UK and European destinations, including seasonal routes across Europe. For trips by sea, the ferry port at Plymouth offers links to France and Spain. That combination works well for residents who work remotely or keep business ties outside Cornwall, and it helps make village living feel practical rather than remote.

We usually suggest starting with current Illogan listings so you can see what your budget actually buys on the ground. Our team brings together properties from multiple estate agents, making it easier to compare homes and narrow down suitable options before viewings begin. It also helps to watch price movement in the TR16 area and weigh up how detached, semi-detached, and terraced homes fit your finances and day-to-day needs.
Before you start viewing in earnest, it is sensible to get a mortgage agreement in principle from a lender. Sellers and estate agents take that as a sign that you are ready to proceed, and it gives you a clear figure for what you can borrow. In a market that can still be competitive locally, having that paperwork ready may give you an advantage when the time comes to make an offer.
Once you have a shortlist, go and see the properties that match it and be thorough while you are there. We recommend checking condition, layout, and location, then spending a bit of time in the surrounding streets at different times of day to get a proper feel for noise, parking, nearby amenities, and the local atmosphere. In Illogan, traditional details such as granite walls and slate roofs deserve extra attention because specialist maintenance can be needed.
After an offer is accepted, the next step is to arrange a survey so the condition of the property is properly assessed. A good survey can uncover structural concerns, defects, and repairs that may affect value or give you room to renegotiate before exchange. That matters anywhere, but in Illogan it is especially useful because a large share of the local housing stock is older.
We also advise appointing a solicitor early, so the legal work can move without delay. They will deal with searches, contracts, and registration, while liaising with the seller’s side and checking that nothing important is missed before completion. In Cornwall, local experience can be particularly useful because some property issues are more common in the county than elsewhere.
From there, it is a case of finalising the mortgage, paying the deposit, and completing on the agreed date. Your solicitor will coordinate the transfer of ownership, and once that is done the keys to your new Illogan home are released. If needed, our team can put you in touch with trusted conveyancing providers who know the local market and can help keep the process moving.
Buying in a Cornish village like Illogan means looking beyond surface appearance and thinking about local building traditions. Granite stone walls and slate roofs are common across Cornwall, and they can age very differently from standard modern materials. When we look round homes with buyers, we pay close attention to stone pointing, the state of the slate tiles, and any signs of water ingress, because repairs to these traditional elements can be specialist work rather than routine maintenance.
Age is another big factor in Illogan, where some houses go back several decades and some much further. Character can be a real draw, but older homes may also bring damp penetration, dated electrics, or original features that need careful restoration. Cornwall’s mining history in nearby areas means there can occasionally be legacy groundworks issues affecting foundations, although that is not the case across the whole village. For any property over 50 years old, we would treat a thorough survey as essential, particularly in a place with so much traditional housing stock.
Day-to-day practicalities matter just as much as charm when you are buying in Illogan. Parking can differ sharply from one property to the next, with some homes offering large driveways and others depending on the street outside, while certain older houses may have shared access or very limited off-street space. In more rural spots, private water supplies or septic tanks can also crop up instead of mains services, so it is important to understand exactly what is in place before purchase. Covenants, lease terms, and any local shared arrangements are worth reading carefully too.

Getting the numbers right from the outset makes the purchase far less stressful. With an average price of £298,589, most Illogan purchases sit in a relatively favourable bracket for Stamp Duty Land Tax, and the current starting threshold means first-time buyers and standard buyers will often pay little or no SDLT at this level. Compared with pricier parts of the UK, that can make a noticeable difference to the overall cost of moving.
There are other purchase costs to plan for as well. Conveyancing fees usually fall between £500 and £1,500 depending on how straightforward the transaction is. A RICS Level 2 Homebuyer Report often starts at around £350 for a standard property, with larger homes costing more, and mortgage arrangement fees can vary from £0 to £2,000 depending on the lender. Searches, including local authority, environmental, and drainage checks, tend to come in at £250 to £500 and are an important part of spotting issues that could affect the property.
Then there is the move itself. Removal charges, possible temporary accommodation, and any immediate repairs or furnishing costs all need to be allowed for, and many buyers find it sensible to keep a contingency fund of around 10-15% of the purchase price for extra costs that arise along the way. We can also introduce trusted providers for mortgages, conveyancing, and surveys if you want help keeping those costs organised.

The current average asking price in Illogan is £298,589, based on home.co.uk listing data. Values differ quite a bit by property type, with detached homes averaging £370,541, semi-detached properties at £265,569, and terraced houses from £215,889. Prices are a little below the 2022 peak of £307,979, but homedata.co.uk records a 3.6% rise in sold prices over the last 12 months, which points to continuing demand. homedata.co.uk also shows average sold prices of £325,839 across the same 12-month period, a reminder that datasets can vary depending on what they measure.
For council tax, Illogan properties come under Cornwall Council. Bands run from A to H and depend on the assessed value of the home, with many terraced houses and smaller properties often sitting in bands A to C, while larger detached homes can fall higher up the scale. Given the local average price of about £298,589, a fair number of homes are likely to sit in band B or C. Cornwall Council’s online portal and the Valuation Office Agency website are the usual places to check the exact band for a specific address.
Families looking at Illogan and the wider TR16 area have a number of school options to consider. Illogan Highway Primary School serves the village itself and takes children from reception to Year 6, while other local primary schools also cover reception through Year 6 depending on catchment. For secondary education, nearby towns provide options including Humphry Davy School in Penzance and Camborne Science and International Academy, both offering GCSE and A-Level study. We always suggest checking performance data, Ofsted ratings, and admission policies for each school before making a final decision.
Public transport is workable here, even if many residents still prefer the flexibility of a car. First Kernow runs regular bus services through the TR16 area, linking Illogan with Camborne, Redruth, Truro, and nearby villages. For rail travel, Camborne and Redruth are the nearest stations and provide mainline services to Plymouth, Exeter, and London Paddington, with journey times of roughly four and a half hours to London. The A30 trunk road also runs through the wider area, so road access towards Exeter and beyond is straightforward.
For investors, Illogan has a few obvious strengths. Prices are often lower than in Cornwall’s better-known coastal hotspots, which can make the village look good value by comparison, and access via the A30 plus rail links from Camborne and Redruth supports travel to larger employment centres. Rental demand may come from professionals working in nearby towns or from people after a weekend base in Cornwall. Dunstan Meadows, a small exclusive development, is also a sign that developers still see confidence in the local market.
Stamp Duty Land Tax for standard buyers starts at 0% on the first £250,000, then moves to 5% on the part from £250,000 to £925,000. From £925,000 to £1.5 million the rate is 10%, and above £1.5 million it rises to 12%. First-time buyers get relief up to £625,000, paying 0% on the first £425,000 and 5% on the portion between £425,000 and £625,000. With Illogan’s average price sitting around £298,589, most purchases here fall into the lowest banding structure, which keeps costs relatively manageable.
Illogan is inland, so it does not face coastal erosion directly. That said, any property in a lower-lying spot near a watercourse should still be checked for flood risk history, and Cornwall’s mining past means some locations can carry legacy ground stability concerns. We recommend the usual searches and a proper survey before completion so potential environmental issues are identified early. As part of standard conveyancing, your solicitor will normally carry out drainage, environmental, and local authority searches.
Dunstan Meadows is the main new development to note in Illogan at present. It is a small exclusive scheme nearing completion in the village and offers modern homes aimed at buyers who want new build accommodation with up-to-date energy efficiency and construction standards. Outside that site, though, the market is still largely shaped by existing housing stock built across several decades. We suggest keeping an eye on our listings because stock can appear and move at its own pace here.
From 3.5%
We can put you in touch with mortgage brokers who know the Illogan market and can help you look for competitive rates.
From £499
We work with trusted conveyancing solicitors who can handle your property purchase in Illogan.
From £350
Our RICS-certified surveyors inspect homes across the TR16 area and spot defects before you commit.
From £80
We can help with the Energy Performance Certificates required for all property sales in Illogan.
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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.
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.