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Flats To Rent in Keyingham, East Riding of Yorkshire

Search homes to rent in Keyingham, East Riding of Yorkshire. New listings are added daily by local letting agents.

Keyingham, East Riding of Yorkshire Updated daily

Studio apartments feature open-plan living spaces without separate bedrooms, incorporating sleeping, living, kitchen, and bathroom facilities. The Keyingham studio market includes properties in modern apartment complexes, converted Victorian and Georgian buildings, and purpose-built developments.

Keyingham, East Riding of Yorkshire Market Snapshot

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The Property Market in Keyingham

Keyingham’s housing market is not huge, but it does cover a useful range, and family housing sits near the centre of it. homedata.co.uk records show detached homes averaged £222,111 over the last year, semis £171,943 and terraces £128,125. Across all sales, the average sold price was £182,561, with semis making up most transactions, so that house type does a lot to define the local streetscape. For renters, that matters, because the homes a village has most of often become the homes it lets most of as well.

There is some new-build stock in Keyingham, just not on a large scale. home.co.uk currently lists Strawberry Fields by MR Builder from £325,000, including detached homes such as The Helmsley. homedata.co.uk also shows prices were similar to the previous year and 4% below the 2022 peak of £190,313, which points to a market that has stayed fairly level rather than moving sharply. For anyone prioritising space, parking and a newer finish, that combination still comes up here.

The Property Market in Keyingham

Living in Keyingham

Keyingham feels every bit an East Riding village, with a clear Holderness character. The land around it is flat and open, so the weather and the sense of space are far more noticeable than they are in Hull or in denser parts of the county. That setting often suits renters who want gardens, simpler parking and a quieter everyday pattern. Homes are clustered around a modest centre too, which helps the village feel close-knit rather than spread across a busy urban grid.

Most daily routines here revolve around village errands or short trips to nearby towns, with Hull usually covering bigger shops, entertainment and rail connections. From what we see, the renter mix tends to include local households, commuters and families who want more room than a city postcode often provides. The draw is as practical as it is visual, quieter streets, traditional East Yorkshire surroundings and a location that still leaves Hull within reach. For the right household, that balance is the point.

Living in Keyingham

Schools and Education in Keyingham

The research for Keyingham does not provide a verified school list or current Ofsted grades, so we would treat any school search as address-specific and check the latest admissions map. For younger children, Keyingham Primary School is the obvious starting point, and many village renters place real value on having a primary school they can walk to. Secondary options usually widen out into the broader East Riding and Hull corridor because Keyingham is a smaller settlement. That is why the exact postcode matters if school access is high on your list.

Families moving into the village should treat catchment as something live, not as a fixed local advantage. A house can look close on the map and still sit outside a preferred school boundary, especially where intake patterns shift from year to year. We would check East Riding of Yorkshire Council's admissions guidance before booking viewings, then compare that with the latest Ofsted report for any school under consideration. In a village setting, one street can fall into a different catchment from the next.

Where education leads the decision, Keyingham tends to suit households comfortable with a village primary-school base and wider choices for older children. The gain is often a calmer home life and a simpler day-to-day routine than you get in larger towns. The compromise, of course, is that secondary school runs may need to fit around your commute if the school is further afield. Even so, many renters feel the extra space and slower pace make that worthwhile.

Transport and Commuting from Keyingham

Road travel is one of Keyingham’s stronger practical points. The village sits on the A1033 corridor, giving direct access towards Hull and the Holderness coast, and drivers often find it easier to live with than a town centre because parking pressure is usually lower and the roads are less congested. Street choice still matters, though, so we would always check whether a property has off-street parking or dependable on-road space. For car-based renters, that can make a real difference.

Bus travel here usually means working around services linking Keyingham with Hull and other East Riding settlements, while rail users normally go into Hull for the main station network. The flat ground makes cycling a realistic option, although in Holderness the wind can be more of an issue than the terrain. If you commute every day, it is worth testing the route at the time you would actually travel, because village access, school traffic and weather can alter journey times more than expected. The best rental fit is usually the one that suits your real week, not just the map.

Transport and Commuting from Keyingham

How to Rent a Home in Keyingham

1

Check your budget

We would get a rental budget agreement in principle sorted before viewing, then line up your monthly cap with Keyingham homes and the travel costs that come with village living.

2

Compare streets carefully

Do not stop at the postcode. We would compare A1033 access, parking, garden size and distance from the village centre, because those are the details that shape everyday life.

3

View at different times

Try to see the property twice, once in daylight and, if possible, once at a busier time, so you can judge traffic, noise, parking and the general feel of the street.

4

Review the paperwork

Before making an offer, ask for the tenancy length, deposit terms, holding deposit, bills, maintenance responsibilities and any new-build management rules.

5

Check safety and condition

Ask to see the EPC, gas safety record and any maintenance notes. If the home is older, we would also ask about drainage, heating and any local flood history.

6

Complete referencing and move in

Move quickly on tenant referencing, read the inventory with care and take dated photos on move-in day, so there is a clear record from the outset.

What to Look for When Renting in Keyingham

The research does not flag a conservation area or a listed-building cluster in Keyingham, which can make the compliance side simpler than in older historic centres. Even so, we would still ask whether a property has any drainage history, particularly given the flatter Holderness ground. With an older terrace or semi, check the roof, gutters, insulation and any sign of damp. Fresh paint can cover a lot, and cosmetic presentation is not the same thing as sound maintenance.

Anyone looking at a flat or converted property should pay attention to leasehold details, even though local stock appears to lean more towards semis, terraces and detached homes. We would ask who handles external repairs, whether service charges apply and whether ground rent forms part of the arrangement. Newer homes can bring estate management fees as well, and those numbers can shift the true monthly cost of a tenancy if bills or communal upkeep are wrapped in. The lowest advertised rent is not always the cheapest place to live.

There is a clear split in the market. home.co.uk currently shows Strawberry Fields from £325,000, while homedata.co.uk records a last-year average of £182,561, so Keyingham offers both established housing and newer homes. For renters, that is helpful because it opens up more choice on age, layout and energy performance. We would ask every landlord or agent for the EPC, the heating setup and any recent maintenance record before deciding. In this village, the better value often comes from a home that gets the balance right between size, parking and running costs, not simply the lowest rent.

Deposit and Fees and Renting Costs in Keyingham

For a rental tenancy in Keyingham, the money usually due upfront is the holding deposit, the tenancy deposit and the first month's rent. Under the Tenant Fees Act, the tenancy deposit is capped at five weeks' rent for most annual rents under £50,000, and the holding deposit is normally one week's rent. So the real upfront total depends on the asking rent and any pet or utility arrangement, not on Keyingham itself. We would always ask the agent for a full move-in breakdown before booking anything.

Anyone weighing up renting against buying should keep the 2024-25 stamp duty thresholds in view. They 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 buyers get 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. homedata.co.uk puts the average sold price in Keyingham at £182,561, which keeps many homes below the first threshold, while newer stock such as Strawberry Fields from £325,000 sits in another bracket. That gap can matter if you are deciding whether to keep renting for now or buy.

Before viewing any property, we would have a rental budget agreement in principle ready so you can act quickly when the right home comes up. That matters in a village market where the best-positioned homes can go fast and where available stock can swing from semis to detacheds with little warning. Add travel costs, council tax and utilities into the calculation, then compare the full monthly outgoings rather than only the asking rent. It becomes much easier to judge whether a newer detached home or a more straightforward terrace offers the better value.

Frequently Asked Questions About Renting in Keyingham

What is the average rental price in Keyingham?

The supplied research does not give a verified average rent for Keyingham, so we would not invent one. For context, homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price of £182,561 over the last year, with semis at £171,943 and terraces at £128,125. That points to a relatively accessible East Riding housing base, which helps explain why both renters and buyers consider the village. home.co.uk also lists Strawberry Fields from £325,000, giving a live sense of the newer end of the market.

What council tax band are properties in Keyingham?

Council tax is set property by property in Keyingham, so there is no single band for the whole village. East Riding of Yorkshire Council is the relevant billing authority, and the band depends on the specific home's valuation, size and type. In general, terraced and semi-detached homes often sit in lower bands than detached homes, but we would always confirm the exact band using the full address rather than the street name alone. A letting agent or the council should be able to provide that before you commit.

What are the best schools in Keyingham?

School choice here is best treated as postcode-specific because the research for this page does not include a verified school league table or current Ofsted list. Keyingham Primary School is the natural first option for younger children, while secondary choices usually extend into the wider East Riding and Hull area. Before applying, we would check the latest Ofsted report and the admissions catchment for the exact address, because village boundaries can have more impact than many expect. That check matters even more if simple school runs are central to the move.

How well connected is Keyingham by public transport?

Set on the A1033 route towards Hull and the Holderness coast, Keyingham is well placed for road access. Bus users usually depend on links into Hull and nearby East Riding settlements, and rail travellers generally go into Hull for the main station network. We would not treat the village as a city-centre transport hub, but for village living and car-based commuting it is practical. Parking is often easier than in denser urban areas, though each street still needs checking.

Is Keyingham a good place to rent in?

For renters wanting a quieter East Riding village base, Keyingham has a lot going for it. homedata.co.uk records show prices were similar to the previous year and 4% below the 2022 peak of £190,313, suggesting a market that has stayed steady rather than overheated. The housing mix leans towards semis and terraces, with detached homes at the higher end, so there is a fair spread across different budgets. Open surroundings, a local feel and straightforward access towards Hull all add to the appeal.

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

Upfront rental costs are usually straightforward, a holding deposit, a tenancy deposit and the first month’s rent. The tenancy deposit is usually capped at five weeks' rent under the Tenant Fees Act, and the holding deposit is typically one week's rent. If you are setting that against buying instead, 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. First-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000.

What kinds of homes do you get in Keyingham?

There is no single property type that defines the whole village market. homedata.co.uk shows detached homes averaging £222,111, semis £171,943 and terraces £128,125 over the last year, which points to a mix of family housing and more accessible starter stock. Most sales were semis, so that is likely to be the style you see most often in local streets, while newer detached homes raise the bar for space and finish. From a rental point of view, that spread is useful because it usually improves your chances of finding the right size and layout.

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