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Search homes to rent in Ellingstring, North Yorkshire. 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 Ellingstring span purpose-built blocks, converted period houses, and modern apartment complexes on various floors.
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Showing 0 results for 2 Bedroom Flats to rent in Ellingstring, North Yorkshire.
homedata.co.uk records show that the Ellingstring locality has a current average value of £472,286, which puts it well above the North Yorkshire average of £272,000 recorded in December 2025. The local price spread is wide for such a small place, starting at £223,471 for a 1-bedroom freehold house and reaching £672,793 for a 5-bedroom freehold house. Over the last 12 months there were no sales in Ellingstring as of 15 January 2026, while the last three years produced just two sales. That kind of turnover usually points to a tightly held rural market with very limited change.
Market trends also show that the village has held value over time, with the Ellingstring sales market up 32.0% over the last 10 years and prices up 1.7% since the last recorded sale on 25 March 2024. Across North Yorkshire, homedata.co.uk shows the county average price changed by 0.6% year on year, semis rose by 1.9% and flats fell by 2.8%. The county also recorded 14,500 property sales between January and December 2025, down 17.8% or 3,400 transactions from the previous 12 months. For renters, that context matters because higher-value village homes often sit in smaller, more selective rental pockets.

Ellingstring is a very small rural settlement, so its character comes from scale as much as from architecture. Older stone-built homes are common across this part of North Yorkshire, and the research on the wider area points strongly toward traditional stone construction rather than large modern estates. Because the village is so small, population and household data are not usually broken out separately, so the lived experience matters more than a spreadsheet. Expect peace, open skies and a slower pace than you would find in a market town.
The surrounding landscape is part of the appeal, with North Yorkshire geology ranging from limestone to gritstone and some clay deposits in different parts of the county. Detailed shrink-swell or flood maps need a property-by-property check, but inland rural homes here are more likely to ask you to think about drainage, surface water and beck levels than about major coastal flooding. Everyday errands usually mean a short trip to Ripon, Masham or Leyburn, where you will find the practical shops, services and food options. That blend of countryside and nearby towns gives Ellingstring a calm feel without leaving you completely cut off.
Walking routes, quiet lanes and easy access to the open countryside are the real day-to-day amenities here. In a village of this size, the atmosphere comes from hedgerows, stone cottages and farming land rather than a long high street. Renters who value scenery, privacy and a sense of retreat often settle well in this part of the county. A visit at different times of day is worth the effort, because a sleepy afternoon lane can feel quite different on a winter evening commute.

Families looking at Ellingstring need to work from the wider catchment picture, because the village is too small for rich school data to be published at settlement level. The safest route is to check current admissions maps with North Yorkshire Council and speak to schools directly before committing to a tenancy. In practice, many parents make the decision around the school run as much as around the number of bedrooms. A home that looks ideal online can become awkward if the routine adds too much time every morning.
Nearby market towns are usually where renters widen their search for primary, secondary, sixth form and further education options. Because catchments can change and rural transport can be limited, a viewing should be paired with a school run test rather than just a postcode check. If you need wraparound childcare, before-school clubs or an easy sixth-form commute, build that into the budget and timetable from the start. For first-time renters with children, the key question is not prestige, but whether the weekly routine will genuinely work.
Ellingstring itself feels like a place where education choices are planned carefully, which suits organised households. The village setting can work well if you want children close to open countryside, but the logistics matter more than they would in a larger town. We suggest lining up your rental budget agreement in principle first, then shortlisting homes by school access and travel time. That keeps the search grounded in real daily life rather than guesswork.

Transport in Ellingstring is shaped by its rural setting, so the car remains the most reliable way to get around day to day. No rail station is verified in the village itself, which means commuters generally rely on local roads and onward connections from nearby towns. That does not make the area isolated, but it does make the transport picture very different from a town suburb. Anyone who depends on frequent rail trips or late-night services should test those journeys before signing.
Road access to Ripon, Masham and Leyburn is the practical frame of reference for most journeys, whether you are heading to work, the shops or a weekend appointment. Bus services in small villages can be infrequent, so checking the timetable against your work pattern matters as much as looking at the property photos. Parking is another local issue, since older cottages may only offer on-street spaces while larger homes can have driveways or small yards. Cyclists can make short rural hops, yet winter weather, unlit lanes and hillier terrain mean it is worth doing one trial ride before you commit.
Commuters who need regular regional travel should also think about how easy it is to reach main routes from the village. A property with off-street parking, space for visitors and a sensible turning area can make a bigger difference here than it would in town. If you work hybrid hours, Ellingstring can be a calm home base, but it rewards careful planning more than impulsive viewing. That is exactly why we suggest matching your transport needs to your budget before you start comparing listings.


Older village homes can be beautiful, but they also need a sharper eye than newer flats. In Ellingstring, the likelihood of stone-built or period properties means damp, roof condition and heating efficiency deserve extra attention, especially in houses that have spent decades weathering rural winters. No active new-build developments were verified in the village, so many renters will be choosing from established homes or small conversions rather than fresh estates. Ask the agent how the home has been maintained, which improvements were done recently and whether any repairs are still outstanding.
Local geology in North Yorkshire is varied, with limestone, gritstone and some clay deposits across the county, so ground conditions are never something to assume away in a rural settlement. Specific local shrink-swell or flood figures for Ellingstring were not available in the research pack, which is exactly why an individual inspection matters. Surface water, drainage around lanes and any nearby beck should be checked if a property sits low or has a garden that holds water after heavy rain. If you are viewing a flat or an upper-floor conversion, ask about service charges, ground rent, parking rights and any restrictions on pets or alterations.
Conservation status and listing are also worth checking, since older Yorkshire villages often contain protected buildings even when the village itself is small. If the home is listed, repairs can be more expensive and the rules around windows, walls and external changes can be stricter. Broadband and mobile coverage are practical issues here too, especially for remote workers, so test them in person rather than assuming the postcode tells the whole story. A careful viewing now can save you a lot of friction after you move in.

There is not a reliable village-wide rental average in the research pack, which is normal for such a small settlement. homedata.co.uk does show a current average value of £472,286 for the Ellingstring locality, with a range from £223,471 to £672,793. That points to a small stock of character homes rather than a large, standardised rental market. For a real rent figure, the best guide is always live listings in Ellingstring and the nearby Ripon-side villages.
Ellingstring sits within North Yorkshire Council’s area, so council tax depends on the individual home rather than the village name alone. Smaller cottages are often in lower bands, while larger detached houses and converted homes can sit higher. Ask the agent for the exact band before you apply, because council tax can change your monthly budget as much as the rent itself. If the property is furnished or includes extra buildings, make sure the banding applies to the full home you are renting.
No village-specific school dataset was available for Ellingstring, which is normal for a settlement of this size. Families usually widen the search to nearby North Yorkshire schools and then check catchments, admissions rules and travel times directly. That is the safest route because catchment boundaries can change and rural transport can be limited. If school access matters to you, build the tenancy around the school run rather than the postcode alone.
Ellingstring is lightly connected by public transport compared with a town or city. There is no verified rail station in the village itself, so most journeys rely on roads and services from nearby market towns. Bus timetables can be sparse in rural North Yorkshire, so check the exact outbound and return journeys before you commit. For everyday life, a car is usually the most practical option.
Yes, if you want a quiet rural base, a village feel and easy access to the countryside. Ellingstring is less suitable if you need frequent rail travel, late-night buses or a wide choice of apartments. The housing market is very small, with no recorded sales in the last 12 months and only two sales in the last three years on the locality data we have. That limited turnover is part of the appeal for some renters, but it also means you need to move quickly when the right home appears.
Expect the usual tenancy costs: a security deposit, the first month’s rent, and any holding deposit or referencing charge requested by the agent. Older homes can also bring extra moving costs, such as cleaning, contents cover, higher heating bills or short-term storage. If you are comparing options, get a rental budget agreement in principle first so you know your ceiling before you book viewings. That keeps the search realistic and stops a lovely cottage from stretching you too far.
The research points to a small rural market dominated by character homes, especially stone-built or period properties, with detached houses appearing more often than apartments. No verified active new-build developments were found in Ellingstring itself, so fresh estate-style stock is unlikely to be the norm. homedata.co.uk also records a wide value spread, from £223,471 to £672,793, which hints at a mix of sizes and finish levels rather than one standard housing type. In practical terms, renters should expect individuality rather than uniformity.
No specific flood map for the village was available in the research pack, so it is best treated as a property-by-property check rather than a blanket warning. Because Ellingstring is inland and rural, large-scale coastal flooding is not the obvious issue, but surface water and drainage around lanes still deserve attention. Ask the agent about any previous incidents, and inspect gardens, gullies and boundary walls after heavy rain if you can. A local survey or detailed inspection is the safest way to spot problems early.
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Renting in a village like Ellingstring usually means paying attention to the whole move-in cost rather than rent alone. Your first outlay is likely to include the first month’s rent, a security deposit, the holding deposit if one is requested, referencing costs, moving transport and the first round of bills. For older rural homes, energy efficiency can change the monthly picture too, so a cheaper rent can still feel expensive if heating is poor. That is why we recommend comparing the rent, the EPC and the likely travel budget together.
For renters who may buy later, Ellingstring’s higher-value housing context matters. homedata.co.uk shows the local average value at £472,286, which sits above the current £425,000 first-time buyer relief ceiling and within the 5% relief band from £425,000 to £625,000. The standard stamp duty bands for buyers in 2024-25 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. That does not change the renting process itself, but it helps long-term movers understand the next step if Ellingstring becomes a place they want to put down roots.

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