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Search homes to rent in Clipston, Rushcliffe. New listings are added daily by local letting agents.
The 2 bed flat sector typically includes two separate bedrooms, dedicated living areas, and bathroom facilities. Properties in Clipston span purpose-built blocks, converted period houses, and modern apartment complexes on various floors.
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Source: home.co.uk
Showing 0 results for 2 Bedroom Flats to rent in Clipston, Rushcliffe.
Clipston's housing mix is strongly house-led, and the census data in the research set says 259 dwellings, or 99%, were houses or bungalows, with only 2 dwellings, or 1%, recorded as flats or maisonettes. That matters for renters because the village is far more likely to offer a cottage, terrace, semi or detached home than a block of apartments. homedata.co.uk records also point to a local market dominated by larger homes, with detached properties averaging £623,750 and terraces averaging £380,000 over the last year. For anyone browsing here, that usually means the best rental matches are family-sized properties rather than compact city-style lets.
Market signals suggest a firm picture rather than a falling one, with homedata.co.uk showing prices about 9% higher than a year ago and around 9% above the 2017 peak. Another sold-price feed in the research set points to an 18.2% rise over 12 months, which reinforces the view that Clipston remains a sought-after village market. No active new-build developments specifically within the village were identified in the supplied research, so new rental supply is unlikely to come from a large scheme. Instead, homes tend to come to market one by one, which makes early alerts and a ready application especially valuable.

Clipston is a small place with a distinctly rural feel, and the numbers back that up. Around 643 people live here, spread across 252 households, which gives the village a close-knit character that many renters find appealing after living in busier suburbs. The tenure mix is also telling, with 77% owner-occupied homes, 11% privately rented and 11% rented from a registered provider. That balance usually produces a quieter street scene, more long-term neighbours and a market where the available rental homes can be snapped up quickly.
Families and professionals tend to choose Clipston when they want countryside surroundings without losing access to the wider East Midlands housing market. The research does not pin down a local geology profile or specific flood hot spots, so the most practical approach is to check drainage, garden levels and access routes at each viewing. Coastal flood risk is irrelevant here because this is an inland village, which keeps the risk conversation focused on surface water and property condition rather than tides. For day-to-day living, that means asking sensible rural-home questions, such as where bins are stored, how deliveries work and whether the driveway or lane is shared.

The supplied research does not surface named schools inside the Clipston boundary, and that is common for a settlement of this size. For renters with children, the smart move is to widen the search to nearby Rushcliffe and the surrounding school map, then check catchments before you commit to a tenancy. Ofsted ratings were not included in the research set, so any shortlist should be confirmed directly with the schools and the local admissions team. A small village can be a lovely place to live, but school-led moves need extra homework because the best home is only useful if the daily route also works.
Because the village stock is overwhelmingly houses and bungalows, family tenants are more likely to be looking for gardens, parking and enough bedrooms for older children. That makes school runs, bus pick-up points and after-school travel part of the real decision, not an afterthought. If you need primary, secondary or sixth-form access, start with the admissions boundary, then compare your commute and rental budget together. For long-term renters, that approach saves time and prevents a last-minute compromise on either the property or the school choice.

Public transport detail for this exact village was not included in the research set, so it is safest to treat Clipston as a small rural base rather than a rail-led commuter hub. That usually means checking nearby bus stops, station access and road links before you commit to a tenancy, especially if you travel daily. No village station was identified in the supplied research, so anyone commuting to Nottingham, Leicester or other regional centres should test door-to-door times rather than relying on map distance. A short-looking journey on paper can become a much longer one at peak time if you need to drive to a rail hub first.
Parking deserves attention here because a lot of village homes were not built with the same off-street capacity you see in newer suburban estates. Narrow lanes, shared drives and older cottage layouts can all affect how easy it is to own a car, receive deliveries or charge an electric vehicle. Cycling can be useful for local errands, but it works best when the property has safe storage and you are comfortable with rural road conditions. Before you view, make a quick checklist that covers parking, commuting hours, bus frequency and the route to your nearest station.
Move timing also matters in a small village market because the right home may appear only occasionally. That is why our advice is to have your rental budget agreement in principle ready before viewings start, then act quickly when the right home comes up. If you are comparing several villages, use the commute test as a tie-breaker rather than the last step. A good local let should work for weekday travel, weekend errands and the practicalities of day-to-day life.
Start with a realistic monthly figure, then get a rental budget agreement in principle so you know what you can safely afford before you arrange viewings.
Check how the property fits the house-led local market, whether you need parking, and how close it is to your commute, school run or regular travel route.
Small-village lets can move fast, so shortlist early, ask about garden size, heating, broadband and any shared access before you travel.
Have ID, references, income evidence and previous landlord details ready, because stronger applications are more likely to be accepted in a thin market.
Read the agreement, check the deposit amount, confirm what is included, and look for notes on repairs, pets, parking and maintenance responsibilities.
On move-in day, photograph the property, confirm meter readings and make sure the inventory matches the condition of the home before you sign anything.
The village's housing stock is so heavily weighted towards houses and bungalows that most renters here will be dealing with older family homes, cottages or detached properties rather than purpose-built flats. That can be a strength if you want space, but it also means you should look closely at condition, heating and insulation during viewings. A listed-building or converted-home setting may also bring restrictions on windows, roofing, extensions or internal changes, so ask whether the property has any planning or heritage limits attached. If you want a home that is easy to personalise, a newer house will usually be simpler than a period conversion.
Rural homes deserve a careful eye on access, drainage and maintenance responsibilities. Even though coastal risk is not relevant here, surface water, lane runoff and garden levels can still affect comfort after heavy rain, so it is worth asking where water goes and who maintains nearby drains or shared drives. For detached and semi-detached homes, check loft insulation, roof condition and the age of the boiler, because those are common comfort and running-cost factors in village lets. If the home has a long drive or a private access track, clarify who clears snow, trims hedges and pays for repairs.
Flats are rare in Clipston, but if you do find one, make sure you understand service charges, ground rent and any shared repair costs before you apply. Leasehold terms can be very different from renting a simple freehold house, and small conversions sometimes come with extra rules around bins, bikes and parking. Ask for the latest energy performance certificate, then compare the likely heating cost with the asking rent so you know the full monthly picture. A good viewing here is not only about the rooms, but also about the practicalities that come with rural living.
The supplied research does not include a verified average asking rent for the exact Rushcliffe village boundary. For context, homedata.co.uk records show a median sold price of £563,000 for the Clipston label used in the market data, with detached homes at £623,750 and terraced homes at £380,000 over the last year. That tells us the local stock is mainly house-based rather than apartment-based, so rents are usually shaped by family-home demand rather than a large flat market. For current lets, check live availability on home.co.uk because supply in a village this size can change quickly.
The research set does not assign an exact band to every address, which is normal for a small village with mixed house types. Clipston sits within Rushcliffe Borough Council for local administration, and council tax bands depend on the Valuation Office assessment for each individual property. A detached home, a terrace and a converted cottage can all fall into different bands, even on the same lane. Always check the exact address before you budget, especially if the home has been extended or converted.
No named schools or Ofsted grades were surfaced in the supplied research for the village boundary itself. Families should therefore widen the search to nearby Rushcliffe and surrounding school catchments, then compare primary, secondary and sixth-form routes before choosing a tenancy. If education is the main reason for your move, admissions rules and school transport should be checked before you sign. That way you avoid taking a home that looks perfect but sits outside the route you need.
The research set does not identify a village station, so Clipston is best treated as a rural location where car use and nearby transport hubs matter. That usually means checking bus frequency, station parking and peak-time road travel before you commit. If you commute daily, test the actual journey in the morning and evening rather than relying on mileage alone. A quiet village home can still work for commuters, but only if the full route is realistic.
For the right tenant, yes. The village has around 643 residents and 252 households, with 77% of homes owner-occupied, 11% privately rented and 11% rented from a registered provider, so it feels settled and low-turnover. The stock is overwhelmingly houses and bungalows, which suits renters who want more space and a quieter setting. If you need lots of flats, late-night amenities or a dense public transport network, it may feel too rural.
For a tenancy, the usual upfront costs are a holding deposit, a tenancy deposit and the first month's rent, plus any moving expenses and reference checks required by the agent. In England, a holding deposit is typically capped at one week's rent, while the tenancy deposit is usually capped at five weeks' rent if annual rent is below £50,000, or six weeks if it is £50,000 or more. If you are comparing renting with buying later, the 2024-25 stamp duty thresholds are 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000-£925,000, 10% from £925,000-£1.5m and 12% above that, with first-time buyer relief to £425,000 and partial relief to £625,000. That extra context can help if you are deciding whether to keep renting or plan a future purchase.
No active new-build developments specifically within Clipston were identified in the supplied research. The census data also shows that only 1% of dwellings were flats or maisonettes, so the village is overwhelmingly house-led. That means most rental choice is likely to be in older houses, bungalows or conversions rather than a modern apartment block. If a flat does appear, check service charges, ground rent and maintenance responsibilities very carefully.
Start with the commute, because transport links often matter more than the postcode label in a small rural market. Then compare garden size, parking, broadband, tenancy length and local school access, since those are the details that will shape daily life. homedata.co.uk's sold-price context suggests Clipston sits in a higher-value house market, so nearby villages may offer different value levels depending on property type. A broader search can help, but the best result is the home that fits your budget and your routine.
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A practical report for older homes and conversions
Renting here starts with the same core costs you would expect anywhere else in England, but the village setting makes it especially important to budget carefully before you view. Ask about the holding deposit, the tenancy deposit, the first month's rent and any required reference checks, then add moving costs, insurance and utility setup on top. If the property is older, it can also be wise to factor in heating and maintenance costs because village homes can be less efficient than newer flats. A rental budget agreement in principle gives you a clearer ceiling, which helps when a good home appears and time is short.
For tenants who are also planning a future purchase, the current 2024-25 stamp duty thresholds are 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000-£925,000, 10% from £925,000-£1.5m and 12% above £1.5m. First-time buyer relief applies up to £425,000, with partial relief between £425,000 and £625,000. Those figures do not change the rent itself, but they do matter if Clipston becomes part of a longer move-up plan. Thinking about both renting costs and future buying costs can stop you from over-stretching at the start of your move.
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