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Search homes new builds in Stalisfield, Swale. 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 Stalisfield 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 Stalisfield, Swale.
Our inspectors often see buyers caught out by the Stalisfield property market. Supply is thin, village location carries a premium, and that shapes every deal. In the Stalisfield Green postcode area, detached homes make up approximately 73% of transactions, which reflects the larger plots and privacy on offer. Detached properties average £2,372,500, semi-detached homes £595,000 and terraced houses £364,000, so there are price points across the board, even if stock stays scarce.
Stalisfield has not escaped the wider correction in prices, with overall values sitting approximately 30% below the peak of £2,542,857. Yet Stalisfield Green has held up better, posting a 7% rise on the previous year. With so few sales, each transaction shifts perceptions, and that pullback has brought some homes within reach of buyers who once found the village out of budget.
We find new build activity in Stalisfield is almost non-existent, with no active development sites operating inside the village boundary. Buyers are drawing entirely from the existing stock, which is generally older and built with traditional materials and methods. That makes surveys important, but it also suits a place where character and authenticity carry more weight than modern convenience.

Stalisfield still moves at an unhurried pace. Its agricultural past and close-knit links have shaped rural Kent for generations, and the village sits within the Kent Downs Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. Rolling farmland, ancient woodland and traditional orchards frame the setting. Footpaths link the village to nearby hamlets, and the walks change with the seasons as fields and woods shift in colour.
The village has the basics for day-to-day living, while Faversham is the practical stop for supermarkets, healthcare and a broader mix of shops and services, all within a short drive. That market town feel sits neatly alongside Stalisfield's rural setting. Faversham also brings the Fleur de Lis heritage centre and regular markets with local produce and crafts. For days out, Whitstable's seafood spots and creative scene are close enough for a trip, and Canterbury adds culture and education.
Community life tends to gather around the pub, village hall and church, each one used for social events through the year. Because the population is small, newcomers are usually folded into village life quickly. Families like the safety and those neighbourly links, and the lack of through traffic helps keep the atmosphere calm, while cars still make the village easy enough to reach.

Families looking at Stalisfield have schooling options in the village's wider orbit, with primary provision local enough for daily routines and secondary schools in nearby settlements. The catchment often reaches into neighbouring communities, where there are several well-regarded primaries within a sensible drive across the rural area. Before making plans, check the current boundaries and admissions rules with Kent County Council, as they can shift placement decisions and even affect which homes make sense.
Secondary choices extend to Faversham, Canterbury and the Kent coast towns, each with its own mix of academic specialisms and extracurricular activities. Kent's selective system also means some families will look at grammar school entry for children approaching secondary age, with testing usually taking place during Year 6. A move to Stalisfield with school-age children is often easier to judge once current performance data and transport arrangements for schools outside the village are both checked.
Canterbury gives Kent's further education and higher education scene a strong local anchor, with the University of Kent and Canterbury Christ Church University offering undergraduate and postgraduate study across many subjects. For families with older children, that nearby choice can become part of the wider thinking about whether Stalisfield works as a long-term base through several stages of family life.

Roads do the heavy lifting for Stalisfield. Country lanes link the village into the wider Kent network, and from there to London and the south east. The A2 trunk road runs nearby, giving access east to Canterbury and west to the M2 motorway at Faversham, which then ties into London and the national motorway network. By car, Canterbury is usually 25-30 minutes away, and Faversham about 15 minutes when you need everyday shops.
Nearby stations provide the rail link. Southeastern services run from Faversham to London Victoria via Maidstone, while Canterbury has high-speed trains to London St Pancras. Faversham station is approximately 8 miles from Stalisfield, so a car or local bus is needed to reach it, but the direct services still make commuting workable. From Faversham to London Victoria the trip is about 1 hour 40 minutes, and high-speed trains from Canterbury can reach London St Pancras in under an hour.
Bus links to the surrounding villages and towns are limited and timetabled lightly, so for most residents car ownership is close to essential. Cyclists may enjoy the countryside lanes for leisure rides, though the hilly Kent landscape and narrow roads with little shoulder can be awkward for less confident riders. For home workers, the setting is appealing, but broadband speeds and mobile coverage need checking because they can vary sharply from one property to the next.

Before viewing, we suggest checking current Stalisfield asking prices and recent sales figures first. With so few transactions each year, it helps to widen the lens to the broader Swale area because truly comparable evidence can be thin on the ground. The seasonality of the rural market matters too, and it can change the timing of a search more than buyers expect.
Getting a mortgage agreement in place before viewings tells sellers that buyers are serious and ready to proceed. We usually advise speaking to more than one lender or to a mortgage broker, so rates can be compared and borrowing limits measured against the deposit available. Rural homes can sometimes raise questions for lenders, especially where construction is non-standard or features are unusual, so early clarity on finance helps.
It pays to visit several Stalisfield properties before fixing a budget in your mind. Walk the surrounding lanes at different times of day and on different days of the week, so noise, traffic and the general feel of the place are all clear. Ask the estate agent about the community, recent village sales and anything that might affect resale later.
Because many Stalisfield homes are older and may bring age-related issues with them, a full survey before commitment is vital. Our inspectors often come across timber rot, dry rot, damp and structural movement in traditional Kent properties, and those repairs can be costly if they are missed. A Level 2 survey will flag these matters and give buyers the information needed to decide, or to negotiate with the seller.
Once an offer is accepted, instruct a solicitor to handle searches, contracts and registration with the official title register. We suggest using one with rural transaction experience, since village properties can throw up rights of way, common land or unusual title arrangements linked to older homes. Conveyancing in the countryside can take longer than in a town, simply because some titles are more complex and extra searches may be needed.
After searches are complete and the contract is signed by both sides, contracts are exchanged and a deposit of around 10% of the purchase price is usually paid. Completion tends to follow soon after, when the balance is transferred and the keys to the Stalisfield home are handed over. Buildings insurance should be arranged from exchange onwards so the property is protected at that stage.
Our inspectors regularly review Stalisfield properties and understand the points buyers should look at closely before committing, given the rural setting and the older housing stock. Many homes here were built using traditional methods, with exposed timber frames, solid walls without cavity insulation and roof coverings that need regular care. That is why a detailed survey matters, because timber rot, dry rot and structural movement can be expensive if they stay hidden.
Broadband and mobile coverage can vary sharply in Stalisfield, even between neighbouring houses. Buyers should test current speeds at any property under consideration, because poor connectivity can affect everyday living and future resale value. More people work from home now, and a place that cannot deliver reliable internet may fall short whatever else it offers.
We also suggest checking for nearby agricultural activity that could bring noise, smells or farm traffic. That is simply part of rural life, but it can catch out buyers used to town or suburbia. The village's position near the Kent Downs also means conservation restrictions may shape what can be done, including limits on extensions, alterations or exterior changes to listed buildings.

According to home.co.uk listings data, the average house price in Stalisfield is currently £1,780,000, while homedata.co.uk records average sold prices of £737,500 over the past 12 months. Detached homes average £2,372,500, semi-detached properties £595,000 and terraced houses £364,000. There has been a correction of 30% from the 2023 peak of £1,085,500, although the Stalisfield Green area has risen 7% over the last year. Buyers should note that limited supply keeps the market tight.
Stalisfield sits within Swale Borough Council, and council tax bands vary with the property's valuation. In rural Kent villages, bands usually run from A to H, with most family homes in similar villages sitting between C and E. Check the exact band before you buy, because it will shape annual running costs, and if you think the assessment is off, there is sometimes scope to challenge it.
There is no school in Stalisfield itself, but several respected primaries serve the surrounding villages and towns. Secondary education in the area includes options in Faversham, and Kent's selective grammar system gives academically able pupils another route. Before committing, confirm the current catchment with Kent County Council, since it can affect placement and may change which houses suit families with school-age children.
Transport is limited because Stalisfield is rural, and the bus services run on reduced timetables that do not suit every commute. The nearest railway stations are in Faversham, around 8 miles away, with Southeastern trains to London Victoria and links into the wider network. Most residents rely on a car for day-to-day travel, so buyers should factor that into the practicalities of village living.
For investors, Stalisfield offers a proposition grounded more in quality of life than in high rental yields or fast capital growth. Its Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty setting, tight supply and the lasting draw of rural Kent all point to long-term demand from people who want village living. The correction from the 2023 peak may open a door for medium to long-term buyers, although liquidity is limited and renting in rural locations can be harder work.
Stamp Duty Land Tax in England currently starts at 0% on the first £250,000 of value, then rises to 5% on the portion from £250,001 to £925,000. At Stalisfield's average price of around £755,000, the standard bill comes out at roughly £15,250. First-time buyers buying up to £625,000 may qualify for relief, which can reduce the cost to around £8,250, although properties above that level do not receive first-time buyer exemption on the whole amount.
First-time and re-mortgage options available
From 4.5% APR
Expert solicitors handling your legal requirements
From £499
Comprehensive survey by qualified inspectors
From £350
Energy performance certificate for your property
From £60
Buyers in Stalisfield need to budget for costs beyond the purchase price, and those extras can materially increase the total outlay. SDLT is the biggest one for most people, and a typical £755,000 purchase attracts approximately £15,250 at standard rates under the current thresholds. First-time buyers purchasing up to £625,000 may benefit from relief, but higher-value homes do not qualify for first-time buyer exemption on the whole amount.
Survey fees are money well spent here, given the age of many Stalisfield properties and the chance of defects linked to that age. We normally suggest a RICS Level 2 survey for most homes in the village, with prices starting from approximately £350 depending on size. A more detailed Level 3 structural survey costs more, but it can give a fuller picture of condition and flag issues that could affect a mortgage application or lead to negotiation with the seller.
Conveyancing fees often start from about £499 for a straightforward case, though rural homes with complicated titles or listed building status may need extra work that pushes the bill up. Searches for the Swale area, including local authority, drainage and environmental searches, usually come in at between £200 and £400 in total. We can set out the expected costs in more detail once we know the circumstances and introduce trusted local professionals who understand Kent rural transactions.

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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.