Browse 3 rental homes to rent in Cridling Stubbs from local letting agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Cridling Stubbs 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.
The local sales market gives a strong clue to how the rental market behaves here, because stock is thin and homes do not change hands often. homedata.co.uk shows 2 recorded sales in the Cridling Stubbs parish in 2025 up to March and 3 sales in 2024, which is a very small sample for a whole parish. That limited turnover usually means rental availability is just as patchy, especially for family-sized houses. If you need to move on a deadline, it pays to watch the area closely rather than waiting for a big batch of listings.
Price evidence points to a market led by detached homes, with an average of £452,500 last year, and semi-detached homes at £250,000. Another recent sold-price series put the average at £331,000 as of 18 February 2026, which still shows a strong upward trend over the previous 12 months. The difference between datasets reflects how small sales volumes can make averages jump around from one report to another. For renters, that often means a premium on well-kept homes, especially properties with parking, gardens and straightforward access to the main road network.

Cridling Stubbs is the kind of place renters choose when they want a quieter base and are happy to trade the buzz of a town centre for space and privacy. The research confirms that it is a small parish with limited detailed housing data, which usually goes hand in hand with a close-knit local feel and fewer short-term moves. That setting tends to appeal to couples, small families and long-term renters who value a settled neighbourhood. You should expect the local rental market to be more about quality and availability than volume.
The surrounding area gives you practical day-to-day access without losing the rural character of the parish itself. Nearby Knottingley is the natural service hub for shopping, errands and commuting, while the wider Yorkshire landscape around the village gives a more open feel than a built-up estate. The research did not identify parish-wide figures for demographics, geology or housing age, so it is best to view each street on its own merits. From a renter’s point of view, that means checking the approach road, garden size, parking and broadband rather than assuming every home in the parish offers the same lifestyle.

Families moving to Cridling Stubbs usually think beyond the parish boundary, because the research did not identify named schools inside the village itself. That is common in smaller rural settlements, where the practical choice is often a nearby school in Knottingley or the wider local catchment rather than a village primary on your doorstep. The right school for your household depends on the admissions year, transport links and any sibling priorities. Before you commit to a tenancy, check the live catchment map and ask whether your route to school is realistic in winter.
Because we do not have verified Ofsted data for schools within the parish, we would not guess at a shortlist and risk misleading you. Instead, use the local authority admissions information, then compare it with the commute from the property you are viewing. If you are renting with children, factor in wraparound care, after-school collection and whether the route requires a car. A home that looks ideal on paper can become awkward if the school run adds stress every morning.

Transport is one of the key practical checks in a village like Cridling Stubbs, because the nearest services matter more than the postcode itself. The research links the parish closely with Knottingley, which usually means road travel is the default and public transport needs to be checked route by route. We have not been able to verify parish-specific rail journey times from the research, so it is worth checking the nearest station before you sign anything. If you work hybrid or travel regularly, test the morning route as well as the evening return.
Road access is likely to be the deciding factor for many renters here, especially if you need school runs, shift work or regular trips to larger towns. Parking and driveway space can be more valuable than in an urban area because visitors, tradespeople and household cars often need more room. Bus coverage in a small parish can be limited or timetable-led, so live checking is essential rather than assuming a frequent service. For that reason, the best home is usually the one that matches your commuting pattern as closely as it matches your budget.
Start with the tiny parish market first, then widen your search to nearby areas if you need more choice. Set a rental budget agreement in principle so you know your monthly ceiling before you book viewings.
Rural locations can vary sharply, even within a few lanes, so look at access, parking and nearby services. Check how close the property is to Knottingley, schools and your usual commute.
In a low-turnover area, good homes can disappear fast, so make contact as soon as a suitable property appears. Bring questions about heating, broadband, drainage and outside space.
Confirm the deposit, holding deposit, guarantor requirements and any restrictions on pets or outbuildings. Ask for the EPC, council tax band and any recent maintenance history.
Tenant referencing can take time, especially if you need a guarantor or extra documents. Once approved, check the inventory, meter readings and keys before you move in.
Rural lets in a small parish need a different checklist from an apartment in a city centre. First, check access after dark, because country lanes, single-track approaches and limited street lighting can change how the home feels in winter. Next, ask about broadband speed, mobile signal and waste collection, since those practical details can be the difference between an easy tenancy and a frustrating one. If you plan to work from home, test connectivity during the viewing rather than assuming village life will be automatically quiet and connected.
Flood risk and drainage should also be on your checklist, even though the research did not pinpoint a parish-specific hotspot. Look for signs of damp, heavy gutter staining, standing water and recent repairs, especially in older homes. Detached and semi-detached properties dominate the available sold-price evidence, so it is sensible to inspect roofs, external walls and boundary maintenance carefully. For houses with gardens or outbuildings, ask who is responsible for upkeep and whether any planning or access restrictions apply.
Flats and conversion-style homes, if you come across them, need extra checks on service charges, communal maintenance and lease terms. The research did not confirm a strong new-build pipeline inside Cridling Stubbs itself, and most new-home mentions appear to relate to the wider Knottingley area rather than the parish boundary. That means some of the best opportunities may be older homes that have been upgraded rather than brand-new stock. When a property looks unusually polished, ask what has been replaced, what is still original and what will be your responsibility as a tenant.
We have not found a reliable parish-only average rent in the research for Cridling Stubbs, which is normal for a very small village. Live rental stock can be too thin to produce a stable average, so the best current check is the listings on home.co.uk. For value context, homedata.co.uk shows a last-year average house price of £385,000, with detached homes at £452,500 and semi-detached homes at £250,000. If you want a monthly figure, compare current asking rents on nearby homes rather than rely on an imprecise village average.
Cridling Stubbs falls under North Yorkshire Council for council tax administration, and the band depends on the individual property. We have not found a village-wide band average, so check the listing or ask the agent for the exact band before you make an offer. Rural homes can span several bands, especially when detached properties and smaller semis sit side by side. The local authority website will confirm the charge for the home you choose.
The research did not identify named schools inside the parish. Most families therefore look to schools in Knottingley and the wider surrounding catchment, then compare those options against their route to work and the school run. Because catchments can change, ask the agent to help you map the address to the relevant admissions area. That matters more here than a generic league table.
Cridling Stubbs is best treated as a road-first location, with nearby Knottingley shaping most everyday travel patterns. We could not verify parish-specific rail times from the research, so check the nearest station and live timetable for your commute. Bus services in small rural areas can be timetable-led and less frequent than town routes. If you rely on public transport, view the property with that reality in mind.
Yes, if you want a quieter rural base with a settled feel and are happy to plan around limited stock. homedata.co.uk shows very low turnover, with just 2 parish sales in 2025 to March and 3 in 2024, which usually signals a slow-moving local market. That can work well for long-term renters who value stability. It is less ideal if you need lots of choice or instant availability.
For a tenancy, the deposit is normally capped at five weeks’ rent, and the holding deposit is usually one week’s rent. You should also budget for the first month in advance, reference checks where applicable and, if needed, a guarantor arrangement. The good news is that banned tenant fees are not allowed, so ask for a full breakdown before you pay anything. If your plans later switch to buying, the 2024-25 stamp duty thresholds are 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that, with first-time buyer relief at 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000.
We have not been able to verify a confirmed active development inside the Cridling Stubbs boundary. Some new-home mentions in the research relate to the wider Knottingley area, so treat them as nearby rather than parish-specific unless the address is confirmed. That matters when you are comparing commute time, parking and garden size. Ask for the exact postcode before you assume a property is within Cridling Stubbs.
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Tenancy costs in a small parish often feel higher than you expect, not because the rules change, but because the best homes tend to come with stronger demand. Your main upfront costs are usually the first month’s rent, the tenancy deposit and any holding deposit required by the agent. For a modest local let, the deposit is normally capped at five weeks’ rent, so the cash needed is tied to the asking rent rather than the size of the house. If you are competing for a rare family home, having your paperwork ready can matter as much as having the money ready.
A rented home in Cridling Stubbs also deserves a practical affordability check before you commit. Use a rental budget agreement in principle so you know what you can comfortably afford each month, then add council tax, utilities, broadband and travel costs on top. Detached homes in the local sales evidence averaged £452,500, which does not set rent directly, but it does show the type of housing stock you may be competing for. If you are also considering a purchase later, remember the 2024-25 stamp duty thresholds and first-time buyer relief, but for now keep your focus on the tenancy terms, the deposit cap and a clear monthly budget.
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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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