Browse 1 rental home to rent in Addlethorpe, East Lindsey from local letting agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Addlethorpe housing market, offering space for families with multiple reception rooms and gardens in many cases. Browse detached, semi-detached, and terraced options ranging from period character homes to contemporary developments.
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Source: home.co.uk
Showing 0 results for 3 Bedroom Houses to rent in Addlethorpe, East Lindsey.
Addlethorpe's rental market mirrors the village itself, with detached homes and bungalows dominating the PE24 offer and suiting families, couples and retirees who want room to breathe in a quiet Lincolnshire setting. On our listings, that usually means detached houses with big gardens, semi-detached family homes and accessible single-storey bungalows that suit the slower pace here. Much of the stock is brick-built from the latter half of the twentieth century, so renters tend to see the same solid post-war construction. Most properties we list come with practical layouts and the sturdy feel that marks this part of Lincolnshire.
Sale prices give a useful backdrop here. The average sold house price in Addlethorpe stands at £222,500 according to recent home.co.uk listings data, with detached properties averaging £231,875 and semi-detached homes at approximately £185,000. homedata.co.uk records a lower average of £186,875, which shows how platforms can differ in the way they capture recent sales activity. That sale data feeds into rental expectations, with tenants usually seeing rents shaped by size, condition and how near the property sits to village amenities. Values are down 6% over the past year after a wider national adjustment, a shift that has made the area a little easier on renters. The longer view is sharper still, with a 24% fall from the 2019 peak of £293,532, a reminder of the sizeable correction in this coastal market.
For tenants searching in the PE24 postcode area, the rental offer usually centres on mid-sized family homes priced between £2,083 per month depending on property specification. Detached bungalows with two or three bedrooms sit at the higher end of that range, especially where kitchens, bathrooms or heating systems have had recent upgrades. Semi-detached homes and terraced properties open up a cheaper entry point for budget-conscious renters, with monthly rents often below £2,083 for standard specification. Large gardens and homes close to the village's limited amenities can still command more.

Addlethorpe has the feel of a proper Lincolnshire village, where people know each other and seasonal events pull the community together through the year. This small settlement in East Lindsey district keeps its rural character, yet it still links neatly to larger places along the Lincolnshire coast. Day-to-day essentials are available in the village, while Skegness, the popular market town nearby, adds shopping, dining and entertainment within easy reach. Life here moves to the rhythm of local gatherings, seasonal dates and the routines that have kept the place going for generations.
Around Addlethorpe, the landscape is all east Lincolnshire character, from rolling farmland and coastal heaths to the beaches that sit just a short distance away on the Lincolnshire coastline. Residents get wide skies and countryside walks, with the village set between the marshland interior and the sand beaches that bring visitors from the Midlands. Birdwatching, coastal walks and cycling all fit naturally here, helped by public rights of way running through farmland and over the coastal dunes. Nature reserves and protected landscapes nearby add another layer for anyone who likes exploring the area's wildlife and habitats.
Village life in Addlethorpe comes with a modest list of on-site amenities, so the practical side matters. The nearest convenience shop, post office and essential services are in neighbouring villages or a short run into Skegness. Plenty of residents are happy with that trade-off, since the sense of community and the open countryside more than make up for the lack of shops on the doorstep. For families, the balance between peace, schools and activities in nearby towns becomes a key part of choosing a rental.

Primary schooling for Addlethorpe families is available in the surrounding villages and nearby towns, with local schools taking children from reception through to Year 6. Transport arrangements are usually available for households in the more spread-out rural spots, and the village primaries tend to keep close links with the community while giving children a steady grounding in core subjects. Parents should check the latest catchment boundaries and admission policies, as those can change and may affect a child's place.
Secondary pupils from Addlethorpe usually head to schools in the Skegness area, part of a wider East Lindsey coastal route that serves several communities. Those larger schools offer a broader curriculum, specialist facilities and extracurricular activities that build on classroom learning. For families focused on outcomes, local school performance, Ofsted ratings and catchment lines all matter when choosing a rental, because admissions often go first to children living within the relevant zones. The distance involved also means school transport or a car needs to be part of the plan.
Parents with younger children, or those planning ahead, often look at government league tables to get a clearer picture of school performance in the area. Schools around Skegness do not all perform the same way, so it can be sensible to visit before signing up for a rental in Addlethorpe. Some families also look at faith schools and independent schools within reasonable travelling distance, although those routes involve separate applications and their own entry rules.

Road links do most of the work in Addlethorpe, with the village lying within easy reach of the A158 trunk road between Lincoln and Skegness. That route carries regular bus services along the coast, so residents can head north to Skegness or inland towards Lincoln and the wider rail network. For people commuting to coastal towns or working in Lincoln, the road connection acts as a lifeline. By car, Skegness is usually around 15 minutes away, while Lincoln is approximately 45 minutes under normal traffic conditions.
For longer trips, Skegness railway station links into the East Lincolnshire Railway line, with changes at the right junctions opening routes to Nottingham, Sheffield and Leicester. The station serves the coast with regular services towards the midlands and beyond, though a trip to London still means changing at Nottingham or another major interchange point. Humberside Airport, north in North Lincolnshire, is the nearest major airport for the region, offering UK and European flights for those willing to make the journey to the terminal.
Most Addlethorpe residents still rely on a car, largely because it gives the most flexibility and the village sits within workable reach of the motorway network through Lincoln and Boston. Daytime bus timetables are fixed, so they often do not match standard working hours, which leaves personal transport as the better fit for regular office travel. Parking is more generous than in urban areas too, so owning a car is practical for work, shopping and family life.

Start with a rental budget agreement in principle before you begin looking. A mortgage broker can provide the document, which sets out how much you can afford each month and gives landlords and agents confidence in your application. In Addlethorpe, where rents tend to fall between £600 and £1,100 per month, you will need evidence of income that comfortably covers rent as well as everyday living costs.
Using Homemove, we can browse the current rentals in Addlethorpe and narrow the search by size, location in the village or surrounding area, and the budget you have set for monthly rent and upfront costs. It is sensible to turn on instant alerts for new PE24 listings, because desirable homes in this coastal market can pick up multiple enquiries very quickly.
Book viewings for homes that fit the brief, and see several so you can compare condition, location and how well each place suits your needs. Take measurements and photos to keep a record while you decide. At each viewing, look closely at damp, the state of fixtures and fittings, and the overall presentation left by the current landlord.
Once the right property comes along, submit a formal rental application through the listing agent or landlord, with references, employment verification and your budget in principle certificate. Our team can talk you through referencing and help get the paperwork together and sent promptly, so there is less risk of delay when you are trying to secure the home you want.
Read and sign the tenancy agreement carefully, and make sure you understand your rights, responsibilities, deposit protection arrangements and the length of the rental period before you move in. In England, deposits must be protected in a government-approved scheme within 30 days of receipt, and the landlord has to provide prescribed information about that protection.
Arrange the inventory check, collect the keys from the landlord or agent, and complete the move into your new Addlethorpe home. Update utilities and council tax at the same time. We also recommend taking detailed photos of the property as it is on move-in day, so there is a clear record if any dispute crops up at the end of the tenancy.
Renting in a rural Lincolnshire village such as Addlethorpe means thinking about a few local factors as well as the property itself. Detached houses and bungalows dominate here, and many sit in generous plots with gardens that need work through the year. We always ask tenants to look at roofs, gutters and boundary fencing, because older coastal homes can show signs of weather exposure that may need the landlord to sort. A full inventory before move-in, plus a written note of any existing issues, is the safest way to avoid arguments later.
The village setting brings advantages, but it also asks for a bit of realism before you sign. Local amenities are limited, so essential services may mean travelling to nearby settlements and reliable transport becomes part of daily life. Coastal exposure can push heating costs higher in winter, and garden work should be set out clearly in the tenancy agreement. Broadband speeds and mobile signal strength can also vary in rural spots, so anyone working from home should check both before committing.
During viewings in the PE24 area, pay close attention to the age and condition of the heating system, because rural homes may use oil, LPG or older electric systems rather than mains gas. More recent installations usually mean lower running costs and a better level of reliability. Ask the landlord or agent about recent maintenance, any known problems and how repair requests are reported and dealt with during the tenancy.

Current rental listings need checking for live prices, but the sale market gives a useful guide, with average property values around £222,500. In this Lincolnshire village, rents usually follow property type, size and condition, so detached houses and bungalows tend to sit above smaller homes. Comparable properties in the PE24 postcode area generally range from £600 to £1,100 per month, with two-bedroom bungalows often starting around £650 and larger four-bedroom family houses reaching the top end of that range.
Council tax for Addlethorpe properties sits with East Lindsey District Council. Bands run from Band A on lower-value homes to Band H on the most valuable, although most standard family houses are usually found in Bands B to D. Tenants should check the band for any property they are considering, since it is part of the ongoing cost of renting and can add between £100 and £200 per month depending on the band applied.
Addlethorpe families usually look to the surrounding villages for primary schools, where children can be taught from reception through to Year 6. For secondary education, the Skegness area provides the main options, with curriculum choice and specialist facilities for older pupils. We recommend checking individual Ofsted ratings and performance data, then confirming that any rental property sits within the catchment area for the school you prefer.
Public transport from Addlethorpe runs mainly through bus services on the A158 corridor, linking the village with Skegness and inland destinations such as Lincoln. Skegness railway station offers access to regional rail services and onward connections to major cities. Services are less frequent than in urban areas, so anyone who needs to commute daily or wants more flexibility is usually better off with a car. During the day, buses to Skegness typically run hourly, although evenings and weekends are less frequent.
For renters who like rural landscapes, coastal access and a slower pace, Addlethorpe offers a strong slice of Lincolnshire village life with a supportive community around it. Newcomers are generally welcomed, and local events plus the small number of facilities help people get to know one another. Skegness is close enough to provide full amenities, while rents stay more accessible than in larger towns and cities across the region. Those after nightlife or a broad cultural scene may find it quiet, but families and retirees often value the safety and community spirit.
In England, rental deposits are capped at five weeks' rent when annual rent is below £50,000, so most Addlethorpe homes will need a deposit at roughly five weeks' rent. Other costs can include referencing, administration and check-out fees at the end of the tenancy, although tenant fee legislation limits what landlords and agents may charge. Anyone renting for the first time should budget for the first month's rent in advance, the deposit, moving costs and utility setup fees, with the total often landing between £3,000 and £5,000 depending on the monthly rent.
The full cost of renting in Addlethorpe goes beyond the monthly rent, so it pays to plan for the upfront and ongoing bills from the start. Usually that means the first month's rent in advance, a security deposit equal to five weeks' rent, capped at that level under current tenant fees legislation, and sometimes a holding deposit while references are checked. Those upfront sums can run into several thousand pounds, which makes financial preparation important before the search begins. For a property at £800 per month, the initial outlay would usually be around £3,200 before moving costs are added.
During the tenancy, council tax, utility bills and internet services sit with the tenant, and they carry on throughout your occupation. Coastal weather can mean higher winter heating bills, and larger gardens may bring extra costs for equipment or contractors. Contents insurance is worth having for your belongings, and repair requests should be passed on quickly to the landlord or letting agent so the property stays in good order. A monthly buffer of £150 to £250 for utilities and council tax is a realistic guide for most households in the PE24 area.
When you agree the tenancy, we need to be clear about what the rent covers and what sits with the tenant. Some landlords include garden maintenance or certain utility bills in the rent, while others leave those separate. A careful record of the property condition at the start of the tenancy helps protect you when you move out, and the deposit protection scheme gives a formal route for dealing with disputes over deductions at the end.

From 4.5%
A rental budget agreement in principle sets out affordability before the search starts, giving landlords and agents a clear view of suitability.
From £75
Full referencing service, covering credit checks, employment verification and landlord references, to support a rental application.
From £75
Professional inventory and condition report, there to protect both tenants and landlords throughout the tenancy period.
From £75
Energy Performance Certificate, required for all rental properties and used to give prospective tenants energy-efficiency information.
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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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