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Search homes to rent in Hempstead, Uttlesford. New listings are added daily by local letting agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Hempstead 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 Hempstead, Uttlesford.
A quick check on the research is needed, because the market figures supplied are for Hempstead, Kent, not Hempstead in Uttlesford, Essex. For that Kent location, homedata.co.uk records an average sold house price of £447,486 over the last 12 months, with 66 sales recorded in 2025. Detached homes averaged £654,600, semi-detached homes £366,119, and terraced homes £298,346. Useful comparison figures, yes, but not a read on the Essex rental market.
In the same Kent dataset, homedata.co.uk shows prices 5% higher than the previous year, although still 4% below the 2022 peak of £457,766. New-build homes accounted for 0.0% of sales in 2025, meaning 0 out of 66 transactions, which points to a very thin supply of brand-new stock in that comparison area. In Hempstead, Uttlesford, a similar village pattern would usually mean a small, house-led rental market rather than rows of flats. Good village homes can be chased quickly, so tenants need to be ready when one fits.

Hempstead feels like a proper village, not a commuter estate with a village name attached. The setting is rural, the pace is quiet, and much of the draw is in the views, smaller roads and local character. For renters who want to leave dense urban living behind while still staying within reach of Uttlesford’s towns and services, that can be exactly the point. Day to day, though, it means more planning around trips, errands and timings.
The supplied sales mix, although for Hempstead, Kent, also gives a clue to the sort of housing balance often found around smaller villages. homedata.co.uk records detached homes at 40.9% of sales there, with semi-detached and terraced houses making up much of the rest, and flats appearing only rarely. It is not Essex-specific evidence, so it should be treated carefully. Even so, it lines up with the usual rural pattern, where family houses, cottages and conversions matter far more than apartment blocks, especially for renters wanting a garden, storage or a more traditional layout.

For families, the search around Hempstead usually widens quite quickly to the Uttlesford school network. Nearby village primaries may be the starting point, then secondary choices such as Saffron Walden County High School and Helena Romanes School and Sixth Form Centre come into play. Some households also look at independent schools in Saffron Walden, Bishop’s Stortford and Cambridge. Do not take a postcode for granted, because catchment rules can change and the latest admissions map is the one that matters.
In a small village, the school run can end up shaping the whole week. A property might look perfect online, then feel awkward once you test the peak-time drive, childcare pick-up, bus option or after-school club route. Rural renting is often as much about the daily pattern as the house itself. If school access is the deciding factor, we would shortlist by journey first and postcode second.

Hempstead works best for tenants who are relaxed about rural travel. Having a car will usually make life much simpler, as bus services in village parts of Uttlesford are not normally as frequent as they are in larger towns. Rail commuters tend to use stations elsewhere in the district rather than expecting one close by. Before agreeing a tenancy, test the journey you will really use, not the tidy line that appears on a map.
For drivers, road links across the district are generally usable and make shopping, school runs and work trips around north-west Essex more manageable. Short countryside journeys by bike can be pleasant too, but narrow lanes, limited lighting and winter weather make them less predictable than urban cycling. Parking is often easier than in a packed town centre, although driveway width, turning space and on-street rules still need checking. If the train is part of your working week, look at the station transfer, service frequency and last train before you sign.
Public transport is not out of the question for every renter. It can work if you travel only a few times a week, or if your routine lines up neatly with available services. The problem comes when a peaceful viewing at midday turns into a daily battle with connections. For many households, Hempstead is a clear swap: more quiet and more space, with a thinner transport network. Some tenants love that balance, others do not.
Put Hempstead alongside other Uttlesford villages and be honest about your priorities, whether that is peace, schools or a commute you can live with. A focused shortlist will save wasted viewings.
Sort your rental budget agreement in principle before you get too far into the search, then add deposit, first month’s rent and moving costs to the plan. In a rural market with limited homes, being financially ready can put you ahead.
Try to view at more than one time of day. Narrow lanes, parking pressure and road noise can feel different in the evening from lunchtime, and it is better to find that out early. Ask about broadband, heating, water pressure and local transport while you are there.
ID, proof of income, landlord references and employer details should be ready before you apply. A small market does not give much room for delay, and slow referencing can be enough to lose a good Hempstead rental.
Read the tenancy agreement, inventory and condition report properly, line by line, so you know what comes with the property and what the landlord expects back. Garden maintenance, parking spaces, bins, decorating rules and pets are the details that often cause arguments later.
On moving day, take dated photos and keep your own notes with the inventory. It is a small job at the start, but it can make a big difference when your deposit is being checked, particularly in older or character homes.
Character is part of the appeal with older village homes, but it should not distract from the inspection. Across parts of Essex, clay soils can make cracks, movement and drainage worth a closer look, especially in properties that have been standing for several decades. Ask about damp, the roof, windows, loft insulation and the age of the boiler, because comfort and running costs depend on those details as much as the rent. A house on a narrow lane or exposed plot also needs a check for wind, surface water and winter access.
Converted homes and flats call for a different set of questions. Service charges, building insurance arrangements and planned major works can affect everyday life in a leasehold block, even where you are renting rather than buying. Listed buildings, or homes inside a conservation area, may have tight controls on external changes, so think before assuming you can add equipment or make visible alterations. In Hempstead, a sensible viewing looks beyond room sizes and asks how the building behaves through the year.
Do not leave broadband and mobile signal until after the move. Plenty of renters now work from home for at least part of the week, and a quiet lane is only useful if calls, file transfers and streaming actually hold up. Heating is another big one, particularly in older properties where oil, LPG or less efficient systems can alter the monthly bill. The right home is the one that functions on a wet Monday in February, not just the one that photographs well.
For most rental moves, the first payments are a holding deposit, followed by the tenancy deposit and first month’s rent. In England, the tenant deposit is normally capped at five weeks’ rent where the annual rent is under £50,000, or six weeks above that level, so a larger or more expensive home can change the upfront cash needed. Moving vans, basic furnishings and utility setup charges should sit in the same budget. We recommend getting a rental budget agreement in principle before viewings, while the numbers still feel objective.
The brief also asks about current deposit and fee thresholds, which become relevant if you later decide to buy rather than rent. For 2024-25, the current 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 £1.5 million. First-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. If renting in Hempstead is a step towards ownership, keep those figures in your longer-term sums.
Rent is only one line in the monthly cost of living in a village. Travel, heating and insurance can all move the total up or down, and a cheaper-looking home may cost more if it means longer journeys, weaker energy efficiency or a larger deposit because the rent is higher than expected. That is why our team looks at the full monthly picture, not just the advertised rent. Once you know your ceiling, Hempstead homes are easier to compare fairly.
The research pack does not give a verified average rent for Hempstead in Uttlesford, so we would not invent one. The only price data supplied is for Hempstead, Kent, where homedata.co.uk records an average sold house price of £447,486 over the last 12 months and 66 sales in 2025. That helps describe a separate Kent sales market. It should not be used as a local Essex rental average, so for Hempstead in Uttlesford, check live availability and have your rental budget agreement in principle ready before viewing.
Uttlesford District Council sets council tax bands, and the band depends on the individual property, not simply the village. A compact flat, a cottage and a detached house can all sit in different bands, even along the same road. Ask for the band before applying or signing the tenancy. If the landlord cannot confirm it, ask for the council reference and check it yourself.
Most families look beyond Hempstead itself and into the wider Uttlesford school network. Saffron Walden County High School and Helena Romanes School and Sixth Form Centre are among the better-known secondary options nearby, while local village primaries may suit younger children. Independent schools in Saffron Walden, Bishop’s Stortford and Cambridge can also sit on the list. Catchments change, so the latest admissions rules need checking before you choose a property.
Hempstead is rural, which means public transport is more limited than in a town-centre location. Commuters usually depend on nearby stations and road links across the wider Uttlesford area, rather than frequent services outside the front door. The exact journey matters, especially for daily travel or school drop-offs. If rail access is non-negotiable, test the route at the times you will use it.
For tenants wanting a quieter village life and more room than they might get in a dense urban area, Hempstead can be a strong fit. The compromise is smaller supply and a little more organisation around daily travel. Renters who enjoy countryside access, a slower pace and a local feel often settle comfortably here. Anyone needing constant public transport or city-centre energy may be happier looking elsewhere.
With a rental property, the main upfront costs are normally the holding deposit, the tenancy deposit and the first month’s rent. The deposit cap is generally five weeks’ rent if the annual rent is under £50,000, or six weeks above that. Leave room in the budget for moving costs, utilities and setup charges as well. If you later buy in the area, the current 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.
The supplied comparison data for Hempstead, Kent shows new-build homes at 0.0% of sales in 2025, or 0 out of 66 transactions, which suggests very limited new-build activity in that separate market. Hempstead in Uttlesford, as a village location, is also more likely to offer existing homes, cottages and conversions than large new developments. That can keep supply tight and make the better properties move fast. If a new home does come up, be ready.
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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.
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.