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Search homes to rent in Kenton, Teignbridge. New listings are added daily by local letting agents.
Three bedroom properties represent a significant portion of the Kenton 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 Kenton, Teignbridge.
The figures in this brief point to Kenton, London, where homedata.co.uk shows an average house price of £652,487 over the last year. Detached homes were £843,700, semi-detached £714,271, terraced £563,938 and flats £327,204. We only use those numbers as a warning, because the wrong Kenton can slip into search results very easily. They are not a rental benchmark for Kenton, Teignbridge.
For the Devon village, we would judge the rental market from live listings rather than sold-price averages, so home.co.uk is the place to use once you start weighing up available homes. Stock is usually tighter in a village such as Kenton than it is in Exeter. Good cottages, family houses and any well-kept flat can draw interest fast, which is why being ready often matters more than waiting for the ideal listing to linger.
Homes that are well presented, have parking, outdoor space and an easy route into Exeter tend to attract the most attention. Older properties can win people over on character, while newer or recently updated homes often score better for energy efficiency and easier upkeep. If something looks underpriced for the area, we would check condition, included appliances and any rules on pets or gardening before going further.

Kenton feels like a Devon village, not a commuter suburb. It has a compact core, with countryside close at hand, and that is a large part of the pull for renters after a quieter routine, fresh air and more sense of place than a denser town usually gives. Day-to-day practicality still matters, though, so access to a pub, a convenience stop or a nearby supermarket in the wider area can make a real difference.
For many renters, the setting does a lot of the heavy lifting. Fields, hedgerows and estuary-side routes give the village an open feel, and the surrounding Teignbridge lanes make walks, cycling and weekend trips easy to plan. In a place like this, scenery is not just a backdrop, it affects the housing choice, because some homes give up internal space in return for views, privacy or a more rural address.
The pace here suits couples, remote workers and families who want a calmer base at home. In a village of this size, we would also expect a mixed community, with long-term residents alongside newer arrivals trying to strike a better balance between country living and access to Exeter. Moving from a larger town can feel like a real reset, but it still pays to check travel times, evening bus frequency and parking before deciding.

Families considering Kenton often begin with the nearest primary school and then cast the net wider across Exeter and the surrounding Teignbridge area. Kenton Church of England Primary School is the obvious local school to look at first, especially for anyone wanting a short school run and a village community feel. Catchment rules can move, so we would confirm the latest admissions details direct with the school and Devon County Council.
Secondary education usually involves more travel here than it would in a larger town, so practical bus or car routes often matter as much as Ofsted results. Exeter brings the broadest range of secondary and sixth-form options, and Exeter College is a major post-16 route for older teenagers. That wider choice can suit families who are happy to swap a shorter walk for more academic or vocational flexibility.
Rental demand can shift around school access, particularly for three-bedroom houses and homes with a garden. House-hunting with children means looking beyond the floorplan, so we would check start and finish times, road crossing points and whether there is off-street parking for the school run. A property can look ideal on paper and still prove awkward once morning traffic, narrow lanes or limited bus services are part of the picture.

Kenton's transport setup comes from its rural position and its link with Exeter. Most people depend on a mix of bus services, driving and nearby rail access rather than any dense town-centre network. For commuting, we would usually focus on whether the route works smoothly at peak time and whether getting to the station or city centre means a long detour.
Road links are the main practical strength here. Exeter is within easy reach, and the wider Devon network opens up journeys to Dawlish, Newton Abbot and beyond. The A379 is a key local route, while links towards the A38 give drivers a better chance of reaching larger employment centres. Anyone travelling regularly should test the route at the time they would actually leave for work, not on an off-peak guess.
Rail users normally look to nearby stations rather than expecting one in the village itself, so a plan for station parking is sensible from the start. Cycling can be pleasant for short trips in good weather, but narrow lanes and rural traffic mean we would check the exact road you would be using. If public transport is the priority, identify the last bus home before signing a tenancy.
We would compare Kenton with Exeter and nearby Teignbridge villages, then decide which points matter most, whether that is parking, garden space or a short school run.
Before booking viewings, we would get a rental budget agreement in principle in place, so you know your ceiling and can move quickly when the right home appears.
Try to see the property at the time of day you would actually live there, because access roads, parking and natural light can feel very different later on.
We would ask about tenancy length, pet rules, heating type, energy performance and who takes care of garden or maintenance jobs.
Before making an offer, check for damp, ageing windows, roof wear, drainage issues and any signs of movement.
Keep ID, references, deposit funds and contact details in order, so the landlord or agent can move things along without delay.
In Kenton, the village setting makes the actual property count for more than it often does in a larger urban market. We would ask if the home sits in a low-lying spot, near the estuary or in a position exposed to heavy weather, because drainage and damp can matter more in rural Devon than many renters first expect. If the choice is between a cottage and a modern flat, compare heating costs, insulation and how manageable the home will be to keep dry through winter.
The geology note in the supplied research, referring to London Clay and shrink-swell risk, belongs to Kenton in London rather than this Teignbridge village. For Kenton, Devon, we would use a different checklist, looking at gutters, extractors, pointing and signs of regular maintenance. Older stone or brick homes can be very attractive, but they deserve a careful check of roofs, window seals and any evidence of condensation.
Planning history and local restrictions can also shape the decision, especially if outside space, a conservatory or an altered outbuilding matters to you. Around village cores, listed building rules or conservation-style controls may limit what a landlord can change, and that can affect future comfort and layout. Before anything is signed, we would ask the agent if any part of the home is due to change during the tenancy, particularly where refurbishment or redecoration is planned.
We do not have a verified average rent figure for Kenton, Teignbridge in the supplied research. The only price data provided is for Kenton, London, where homedata.co.uk records an average house price of £652,487, and that is not a Teignbridge rental guide. For this Devon village, live asking prices on home.co.uk plus a rental budget check will give a much clearer picture. That matters even more in a village market, where supply can move quickly when a good home appears.
Council tax bands in Kenton are tied to the individual property, not simply to the village name. Teignbridge District Council is the local billing area, so the exact band sits against the home's valuation record. Smaller cottages and flats will often fall into lower bands than larger family houses, but we would still check the listing or ask the agent before setting a budget. It is the simplest way to avoid an unwelcome surprise after moving in.
For younger children, Kenton Church of England Primary School is the first local school most families will want to check. Secondary and sixth-form choices often lead people towards Exeter, where the range is much wider, including Exeter College for post-16 study. The best option depends on catchment, transport and how far the daily trip needs to be. We would always confirm current admissions details directly before committing to a tenancy.
Public transport here is workable rather than urban-dense, so most households use a combination of buses, car journeys and nearby rail stations. Exeter is the main hub for employment and onward rail travel, and local roads such as the A379 support everyday trips. For anyone relying on public transport, we would check first and last services as well as peak-hour journey times. A home can look perfect and still be the wrong fit if the timetable does not suit your routine.
For tenants wanting village life with access to Exeter, Kenton is an appealing place to rent. The compromise is that the pool of available homes is smaller, so suitable properties may need a quick decision. It tends to suit people who place more value on space, countryside access and a calmer pace than on nightlife and a run of convenience stores. For the right household, that balance works very well.
Upfront tenancy costs usually cover a holding deposit if one is requested, the tenancy deposit and the first month's rent. Most letting arrangements in England no longer come with a long list of extra tenant fees, though we would still read the terms carefully. If rent is being compared with buying later, the current purchase 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. Those buying thresholds do not alter tenancy costs, but they do matter if the next move is already in mind.
Yes, and in a village location such as Kenton, those checks really do matter. We would look closely at gutters, damp patches, ventilation and whether the home sits in a low-lying or exposed spot. The London Clay and shrink-swell note in the supplied research relates to a different Kenton, so that risk should not be assumed here. Even so, a property-specific survey or inspection is still worth having, especially for older cottages or homes with previous alterations.
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Renting in Kenton is not only about the monthly figure shown on the advert. There is usually a tenancy deposit, a holding deposit if the landlord wants one and the first month's rent to cover before move-in. That is why we place so much weight on a clear budget in a village market, where the right home can go quickly and there may be little time to get organised.
If renting now is being weighed against buying later, the current purchase 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. First-time buyer relief is 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. We find those figures useful for movers deciding whether to keep renting in Kenton or put more aside for a future purchase.
The safest budget is one that separates move-in costs from ongoing monthly costs, then leaves a buffer for utility bills, travel and any furniture still needed. In a village setting, parking, heating and fuel costs can matter just as much as the rent on the listing, particularly with an older or less energy efficient property. We would run a quick rental budget check before any viewing, simply to avoid spending time on homes that will put too much strain on the finances.
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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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