Houses To Rent in Crostwick, Broadland

Browse 3 rental homes to rent in Crostwick, Broadland from local letting agents.

3 listings Crostwick, Broadland Updated daily

The Crostwick 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.

Crostwick, Broadland Market Snapshot

Median Rent

£0/m

Total Listings

0

New This Week

0

Avg Days Listed

0

Source: home.co.uk

Showing 0 results for Houses to rent in Crostwick, Broadland.

The Property Market in Crostwick

Crostwick's rental story is best read through its sale evidence, because the local letting market is small and homes can be snapped up quickly when they appear. homedata.co.uk records show a detached home on Hall Lane at £320,000 in July 2023, a detached bungalow at £635,000 in May 2023 and another at £650,000 in December 2022. A semi-detached sale at £184,000 in April 2022 shows that the lower end of the market also exists, although it is much thinner. For renters, that usually means fewer choices than in Norwich and more competition for the right house.

No active new-build scheme was verified in the Crostwick postcode area, so the stock is mainly established homes rather than brand-new apartments or large estates. Detached houses and bungalows dominate the recent evidence, which fits a village with generous plots and a calmer road pattern. Our live search on home.co.uk is the quickest way to spot the few lets that do come up here, especially when a landlord relists a home after a long tenancy. If you are hoping for a flat, it is worth widening the search radius because apartment stock is far less visible in this village market.

One nearby indicator, Crostwick Lane in Spixworth NR10, averaged £240,000 over the last 12 months, yet that address is not Crostwick itself. We use it only as a guide to the broader village-edge market around Norwich. That distinction matters because boundary lines can shift price expectations quickly, even when the roads feel close together. If you are looking for a home to rent here, expect the best options to be family houses, converted older properties and the occasional bungalow.

The Property Market in Crostwick

Living in Crostwick

Crostwick is not a high-street village with a dense parade of shops, and that is part of its appeal. The parish feels settled and domestic, with countryside on hand and a strong sense of local boundary rather than urban sprawl. Residents usually choose it for quieter roads, a rural outlook and easy reach of the Norwich fringe. Our view is that the area suits renters who prefer breathing space over nightlife.

East Anglia's building history is visible in the fabric of homes around Crostwick, with brick, flint, clay pantiles and older timber-framed construction shaping the local look. Chalk underpins much of Norfolk's geology, and flint sits naturally within those strata, which helps explain why the village feels so rooted in local materials. Red Norfolk brick and clay roof tiles are common across the county, and they give many homes a warm, traditional appearance. Older houses can be charming, but they also deserve a closer look for damp, insulation and maintenance.

Amenities are more dispersed here than in a town, so renters usually rely on nearby villages and Norwich for daily convenience. That can be a positive if you want a quieter home base and do not mind planning errands a little more carefully. We have not verified a Crostwick-specific concentration of conservation areas or listed buildings, so the key character point is the rural setting rather than a protected urban core. When people picture life in Crostwick, it is often the landscape, not the shopping strip, that defines the experience.

Living in Crostwick

Schools and Education in Crostwick

We could not verify Crostwick-only school performance data in the research, so families should treat every route into education as a catchment question rather than a village assumption. In a small parish like this, the right school often depends on the street, the year group and the latest admissions map. That makes early checking essential, especially if you want your tenancy to line up with a September start. Our advice is to confirm details before you fall in love with a house.

Primary and secondary provision is usually searched for in the wider Broadland and Norwich area, because Crostwick itself is too small to be read in isolation. We have not verified a specific grammar school route inside the parish, so anyone aiming for selective education should review county admissions carefully and ask about transport. Sixth form and further-education choices are also more likely to sit in Norwich than within the village boundary. That wider catchment approach matters if you need school runs to work with commuting hours.

For renters with children, the best move is to ask the agent how far the property sits from the nearest bus links and what the morning journey looks like at school time. Even when the school is only a few miles away, rural lanes can turn a short map distance into a longer actual run. We also recommend checking wraparound care, breakfast clubs and after-school transport, because those small details make village living easier. If you want a stable long-term tenancy, school planning should happen alongside your budget, not after the viewing.

Schools and Education in Crostwick

Transport and Commuting from Crostwick

Transport from Crostwick works best for people who are comfortable with a rural commute. We have not verified a station inside the parish, so rail travel is usually accessed through Norwich or other nearby railheads rather than from Crostwick itself. That means car ownership is often helpful, especially for early starts or jobs outside the immediate Broadland area. Even so, the village remains close enough to Norwich to suit hybrid workers and regular city visitors.

Road access is the real strength here, because village roads link Crostwick into the broader Norwich orbit without the pressure of central-city congestion. The flip side is that journey times can vary more than they do in an urban postcode, particularly at school-run times or during local roadworks. Cycling can also work for confident riders on quieter stretches, but it is wise to plan lighting and visibility for darker months. Renters who value predictability should test the exact route to work at the time they would actually travel.

Parking is often easier than in denser parts of Norwich, although older cottages and converted homes may have tighter drives or limited turning space. That makes a difference if you own more than one vehicle, need visitor parking or regularly unload equipment. Bus availability should be checked on the specific street rather than assumed across the whole parish. In a place like Crostwick, the local road layout can matter just as much as the headline distance to Norwich.

Transport and Commuting from Crostwick

How to Rent a Home in Crostwick

1

Set Your Budget

Get a rental budget agreement in principle, decide your monthly ceiling, and allow for deposit, first month's rent and moving costs before you book viewings.

2

Compare The Village Edge

Check Crostwick against nearby Spixworth and the Norwich fringe so you understand travel times, parking, school routes and how rural you want your setting to feel.

3

Book Viewings Quickly

Stock is limited in a village market, so arrange viewings as soon as a suitable home appears on home.co.uk and be ready to move at short notice.

4

Prepare Your Documents

Bring ID, proof of income, landlord references, right-to-rent documents and any pet information so the application can go through without delay.

5

Check The Tenancy

Review the break clause, repair responsibilities, EPC, inventory, bills and any special terms, and ask about a RICS Level 2 survey if the home is older or unusual.

6

Move In Carefully

Photograph every room on day one, note meter readings, test locks and appliances, and report any defects straight away so your deposit is protected.

What to Look for When Renting in Crostwick

Village homes here deserve a closer weather and fabric check. No specific flood hotspot was verified for Crostwick, yet surface water, guttering and drainage should still be checked on low-lying or older plots, especially after heavy rain. East Anglian brick and flint homes can hide damp if the pointing, roof or ventilation is tired. A careful viewing should include the loft, external walls and the base of the property.

Planning restrictions matter if the home sits in a converted building, on a larger plot or near older village fabric. We have not verified a conservation area inside Crostwick, but older rural homes can still carry maintenance constraints, shared access routes or restrictions on outbuildings. For flats or conversions, ask who handles service charges, communal repairs and any ground-rent style obligations that are passed through in the tenancy. Those details affect your monthly cost as much as the headline rent.

Longer-term renters should also look at broadband, storage and heating type, because those everyday details shape village comfort. Larger gardens, older windows and detached layouts can be lovely, but they may cost more to heat and maintain. If you are weighing a bungalow against a semi-detached home, think about insulation, driveway space and whether the property feels easy to manage in winter. In Crostwick, practicality can be just as valuable as character.

Frequently Asked Questions About Renting in Crostwick

What is the average rental price in Crostwick?

We have not verified a Crostwick-specific average rent in the available research. The best local price signal comes from homedata.co.uk, which records NR12 7DE at £289,000 on average last year and Hall Lane sales from £184,000 to £650,000. That tells us the village market is value-sensitive and limited in stock, so rent levels will depend heavily on property size and condition. If you want the freshest live lets, use our search and be ready to move quickly.

What council tax band are properties in Crostwick?

Bands are set by each property and handled locally by Broadland District Council, not by the village name alone. We have not verified band-by-band data for every Crostwick home in the research, so the safest route is to check the exact address before budgeting. Detached bungalows and larger homes can sit in very different bands from smaller semis. Ask the agent for the current council tax band and any recent bill estimate.

What are the best schools in Crostwick?

We could not verify school rankings inside Crostwick itself, because the parish is small and catchments spill into the wider Broadland and Norwich area. Families should check primary and secondary admissions maps, plus any grammar-school route if that matters for your household. Sixth form and FE options are more likely to be in Norwich than within the parish boundary. The right school is usually the one your tenancy can reliably feed into, not the one that looks nearest on a map.

How well connected is Crostwick by public transport?

Crostwick is better described as road-connected than rail-connected, and we have not verified a station inside the parish. Most renters will use Norwich or nearby wider-area links for trains and more regular bus services. That works well for drivers and hybrid commuters, but it can feel less convenient for people who need a frequent door-to-door commute. Always test the exact journey at rush hour before you commit.

Is Crostwick a good place to rent in?

Yes, if you want a quieter Broadland village with access to Norwich and a housing mix that leans towards detached homes, bungalows and older houses. homedata.co.uk shows a clear spread in recent sale evidence, from £184,000 up to £650,000, which suggests there is variety in property type and size even within a small boundary. The setting suits renters who prefer space, calmer roads and a more rural feel. It is less suited to anyone who wants a dense rental market with lots of flats and frequent turnover.

What deposit and fees will I pay on a property in Crostwick?

For a rental, expect a holding deposit if the landlord takes the property off the market, a tenancy deposit, and the first month’s rent in advance. The deposit must be protected in a government-approved scheme, and any extra charges should be spelled out before you sign. If you are also comparing purchase costs for later, the 2024-25 stamp duty bands start at 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million and 12% above that. We recommend getting your rental budget agreed before you start viewing so the upfront costs do not catch you out.

Are there flood or drainage issues to check?

We did not verify a Crostwick-specific flood hotspot in the research, but village homes can still suffer from surface water, guttering problems or poor drainage. Ask the landlord or agent whether the property has ever had damp, standing water or blocked outfalls, especially if it sits in an older plot or near a lane. A second viewing after rain can reveal more than a sunny-day visit. For older homes, a condition survey can also help you spot hidden maintenance risks.

Deposit and Fees and Renting Costs in Crostwick

Upfront rental costs in Crostwick are mostly about timing and preparation. A holding deposit may be needed to secure the home, then a tenancy deposit and first month's rent usually follow once your application is accepted. Because the village market is relatively small, you should have documents ready before you book viewings and be clear on your maximum monthly outlay. That way, if a home on Hall Lane or in the wider parish appears, you can move quickly.

Older houses can bring extra running costs, even when the rent itself looks sensible. Heating, insulation, garden upkeep and any parking or outbuilding arrangements should all be factored into the monthly picture. If the property is a flat or conversion, ask what the landlord covers and whether any service-style charges are wrapped into the rent. A good budget is one that leaves room for winter bills, not just the headline figure.

For movers who are also comparing future ownership, the current 2024-25 stamp duty bands 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. First-time buyer relief runs at 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. We mention that because many village renters keep an eye on buying later, especially when they enjoy the location. Even if you are only renting today, getting a rental budget agreement in principle before viewing will keep your search grounded.

Browse Homes to Rent Across the UK

Terms of use Privacy policy All rights reserved © homemove.com | Properties to Rent » England » Crostwick, Broadland

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.

🐛