New Build Houses For Sale in Wigginton, Dacorum

Browse 4 homes new builds in Wigginton, Dacorum from local developer agents.

4 listings Wigginton, Dacorum Updated daily

The Wigginton property market offers detached, semi-detached, and terraced houses spanning various price ranges and neighbourhoods. Each listing includes detailed property information, photographs, and direct contact with the marketing agent.

Wigginton, Dacorum Market Snapshot

Median Price

£1,000k

Total Listings

13

New This Week

0

Avg Days Listed

197

Source: home.co.uk

Showing 13 results for Houses new builds in Wigginton, Dacorum. The median asking price is £999,950.

Price Distribution in Wigginton, Dacorum

£300k-£500k
1
£500k-£750k
2
£750k-£1M
4
£1M+
6

Source: home.co.uk

Property Types in Wigginton, Dacorum

62%
31%

Semi-Detached

8 listings

Avg £989,363

Detached

4 listings

Avg £1.67M

Terraced

1 listings

Avg £390,000

Source: home.co.uk

Bedrooms Available in Wigginton, Dacorum

2 beds 2
£457,500
3 beds 4
£997,500
4 beds 6
£1.18M
5 beds 1
£3.00M

Source: home.co.uk

The Property Market in Wigginton

The local market for Wigginton, Dacorum is typically shaped by limited village stock, strong demand for family homes and buyers who compare it with nearby Tring and the wider Chilterns edge. Because the supplied research points to a different Wigginton, I am using the figures below as a comparator, not as a direct reading of the Hertfordshire village. homedata.co.uk records show a March 2026 average of £394,401, which puts this style of market in the broad mid-range for southern village homes.

Property type matters here. In the comparator dataset, detached homes were £526,989 on average, semi-detached homes £311,962, terraced homes £247,500 and flats £165,000, which shows how sharply the asking budget changes with space, parking and garden size. The same pattern is usually felt in smaller Hertfordshire villages, where homes with good plots and flexible layouts attract the most attention. If you are watching for value, newly built homes can also be worth tracking, and the live comparison in the research lists The Wickets, off Westfield Lane, with 3, 4 and 5-bedroom homes from £334,995 to £549,995 according to home.co.uk, although that scheme sits in the Yorkshire Wigginton dataset rather than this parish.

The Property Market in Wigginton

Living in Wigginton

Wigginton in Dacorum has the feel of a small settled village rather than a busy commuter hub. Buyers usually come here for a quieter rhythm, open surroundings and the sense that everyday life still revolves around local roads, walks and nearby market towns. The research data on the other Wigginton gives a useful clue to the kind of place buyers compare it with, showing 5,901 residents across 2,410 households, with detached homes making up 46.1% of the stock and semi-detached homes 33.2%, according to the 2021 Census dataset used there. That profile is not the Hertfordshire parish itself, but it does underline the appeal of a low-density village market.

Around Wigginton, the landscape is one of the main draws, with countryside walks and a more open feel than you would get in the larger centres across Dacorum. Families and downsizers often want a home that feels tucked away without being isolated, which is why parking, gardens and easy road access matter so much here. If you like the idea of village life with practical access to daily essentials, Wigginton fits that brief well. It is the kind of place where buyers tend to stay for the long term once they settle in.

Living in Wigginton

Schools and Education in Wigginton

School catchments are a big part of the decision-making process in this corner of Hertfordshire, especially for families moving into a village like Wigginton. The supplied census profile for the comparator village shows 2,410 households, with 46.1% detached homes and 33.2% semi-detached homes, which is the sort of family-led housing mix that usually makes education access a major priority. The strongest local secondary option for many movers is Tring School, while nearby primary provision is commonly found in Tring and the surrounding Dacorum villages, depending on current catchments and admissions rules. Because rural boundaries can change quickly, it is worth checking the latest school maps before you make an offer.

Sixth-form and further education options broaden out across the wider area, including provision in nearby towns and colleges within reasonable reach. That matters if you are buying with children of mixed ages or thinking ahead to the next stage of education. The search for a good address in Wigginton often goes hand in hand with a search for the right school run, so parking, access roads and travel time from the front door all become part of the value of the home. Buyers should also check the latest Ofsted reports and admissions criteria directly with each school before relying on reputation alone.

Schools and Education in Wigginton

Transport and Commuting from Wigginton

Transport is one of Wigginton's strongest selling points for buyers who want village living without losing city access. The most useful rail option is Tring station on the West Coast Main Line, which gives commuters fast trains into London Euston, while road users can rely on the A41 for links towards the M25, Aylesbury and the wider Hertfordshire network. In a village market, those links can matter as much as the house itself, because they shape both weekday commuting and weekend travel. If you work hybrid, the balance of station access and home office space can make Wigginton especially attractive.

Bus services and local road connections are more limited than in a town centre, so buyers should check how they will actually get to the station, the supermarket and the school gate. The comparator dataset's low-density profile, with 5,901 residents spread across 2,410 households, is a reminder that village transport is shaped by space rather than frequency, so off-street parking becomes especially valuable. Cyclists and walkers have more room to make local journeys than they would in a dense urban area, although lanes can be narrow in places. For many movers, the transport picture is simple: you trade some central convenience for a calmer setting and a better chance of having space at home.

Transport and Commuting from Wigginton

How to Buy a Home in Wigginton

1

Research the village

Start by deciding how close you want to be to Tring, school catchments and the main road network, then shortlist homes that match your daily routine. If you are comparing period cottages with newer family houses, check garden size, parking and whether the property has enough storage for rural living.

2

Get your finance ready

Arrange a mortgage agreement in principle before you book viewings, because good homes in a small village can move quickly. That single document helps you show estate agents and sellers that you are serious.

3

View with a local eye

Visit at different times of day so you can judge traffic, road noise, parking and how the street feels when school and commuter traffic are both active. Pay attention to drainage, boundary lines and any signs of extension work.

4

Book the right survey

A RICS Level 3 Survey is especially useful for older village homes, homes with unusual construction and properties where you want a full picture of damp, roof, movement or drainage issues. In places with mixed-age housing and clay soils, that extra detail can save a lot of stress later.

5

Instruct a conveyancer

Once your offer is accepted, instruct a solicitor who can handle searches, enquiries and local title checks quickly. Rural homes can bring extra questions around access, rights of way, private drainage and shared responsibilities.

6

Exchange and complete

When your lender, surveyor and solicitor are all satisfied, you can move to exchange and completion with a clearer understanding of the home you are buying. Keep your moving date flexible if you are part of a chain, since village homes often attract buyers at different stages.

What to Look for When Buying in Wigginton

The mix of homes in Wigginton means buyers should look carefully at construction type, plot position and any maintenance history. Village homes can be charming, but a pretty frontage does not guarantee that the roof, drainage or windows have been updated recently. The supplied research notes clay-rich ground and some surface water flooding risk in the comparator Wigginton dataset, so a survey is wise if you are buying a property with older foundations or a low-lying plot. Even if those exact conditions do not apply to the Hertfordshire village in the same way, drainage and ground movement are always worth checking in a rural setting.

Leasehold flats are uncommon in a place like Wigginton, but if you do find one, service charges, ground rent and reserve funds need careful review. Freehold houses are often easier to budget for, although private roads, shared drives and communal maintenance can still create ongoing costs. The research also suggests that the comparator village has no conservation area and very few listed buildings, yet buyers in the Dacorum parish should still ask whether a property sits under any planning restrictions or heritage controls before they plan alterations. In practice, the safest approach is to check title documents, ask about past extensions and verify whether any outbuildings or conversions were properly approved.

What to Look for When Buying in Wigginton

Frequently Asked Questions About Buying in Wigginton

What is the average house price in Wigginton?

The supplied comparison data is for Wigginton YO32 near York, not Wigginton in Dacorum. In that dataset, homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price of £394,401 in March 2026, with detached homes at £526,989 and flats at £165,000. For the Hertfordshire village, you should treat that figure as a reference point and compare it with live local asking prices and recent sales.

What council tax band are properties in Wigginton?

Council tax bands vary from house to house, because the band is based on the value and size of the individual property. In Wigginton, billing and records sit with the local authority area, so Dacorum Borough Council is the council to check if you want confirmation for a specific home. Rural houses can sit across several bands, especially where extensions, plot size and age differ.

What are the best schools in Wigginton?

Many families look first at Tring School for secondary education, then check local primary schools in Tring and nearby villages. The best option depends on your exact address, because Hertfordshire catchments can be tight and sometimes change. Always check the latest Ofsted report, admissions criteria and transport route before deciding.

How well connected is Wigginton by public transport?

Wigginton is well placed for rail and road access, with Tring station offering fast services into London Euston and the A41 giving a practical route towards the M25 and Aylesbury. Bus services are less frequent than in a town centre, so many residents rely on the car for part of the week. If you commute regularly, driveway space and station parking are worth checking before you buy.

Is Wigginton a good place to invest in property?

It can be a sensible long-term choice for buyers who want village appeal, family-friendly homes and easy access to nearby employment centres. The comparator Wigginton dataset shows steady 12-month growth of 2.64% and 40 sales, which suggests a market with demand but not a frenzy. In Wigginton, Dacorum, limited supply and the appeal of a quieter setting can support resale value, provided you buy the right type of home.

What stamp duty will I pay on a property in Wigginton?

For 2024-25, stamp duty is 0% up to £250,000, 5% on the slice from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. At the comparator price of £394,401, a standard buyer would pay about £7,220, while a first-time buyer would pay nothing under the current rules.

What kinds of homes are most common in Wigginton?

Village markets like Wigginton tend to attract detached and semi-detached homes first, with cottages, terraces and a smaller number of flats also appearing where the housing mix is older. The comparator census profile shows 46.1% detached homes, 33.2% semi-detached homes, 13.0% terraced homes and 7.7% flats, which gives a good feel for the low-density pattern buyers often expect in this kind of place. In practice, homes with gardens, parking and flexible living space usually command the strongest interest.

Stamp Duty and Buying Costs in Wigginton

Buying in Wigginton means planning for more than the asking price. Stamp duty, legal fees, survey costs, mortgage arrangement charges, removals and any work you want to do straight after completion all need to sit in your budget from day one. Under the 2024-25 rules, standard SDLT is 0% up to £250,000, 5% on £250,000 to £925,000, 10% on £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. First-time buyers benefit from 0% up to £425,000 and 5% on £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000.

On the supplied market comparison price of £394,401, a standard buyer would pay about £7,220 in stamp duty, while a first-time buyer would pay nothing. That means the exact home type you choose can make a big difference to your up-front bill, especially if you move from a terrace into a larger detached home. Once you add solicitor fees, a RICS survey and moving costs, it is sensible to keep a cash reserve rather than using every pound for the deposit. If you are ready to compare homes, start with an agreement in principle and a clear budget so you know where you can move fast.

Stamp Duty and Buying Costs in Wigginton

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