Browse 1 rental home to rent in Laverton, North Yorkshire from local letting agents.
The 2 bed house market features detached, semi-detached, and terraced properties with two separate bedrooms plus living spaces. Properties in Laverton range from Victorian and Edwardian period homes to modern new builds, with pricing varying across different neighbourhoods.
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Source: home.co.uk
Showing 0 results for 2 Bedroom Houses to rent in Laverton, North Yorkshire.
In Laverton, rental choice is usually fairly slim, not sprawling, and a good home can be noticed almost straight away. Our team often sees interest in stone cottages, smaller family houses and, now and then, a larger rural property with extra outside space. With so little stock, the gap between “average” and “exceptional” is not as wide as it might be in a town, so heating, condition, parking and garden size can carry as much weight as the rent itself.
One caution on the figures: the only firm price data in the research pack is for a different Laverton in Gloucestershire, not this North Yorkshire village. homedata.co.uk records an average house price of £874,500 in the WR12 7NA postcode over the last year, down 17% on the previous year and 21% below the 2016 peak of £1,102,500, but that is not a reading of Laverton, North Yorkshire. For this page, we are keeping the focus on the village you asked about, where home.co.uk gives the better steer on current availability and asking rents. Here, it pays to watch listings closely rather than sit back waiting for a long data trail.

Scale is a big part of Laverton’s pull. This is rural North Yorkshire, with a quiet, close village feel and a setting shaped by the countryside around it. Think open views, narrow lanes, traditional buildings and the sense of renting somewhere where people tend to know who lives nearby. For tenants who want distance from busier places, that is often exactly the point.
The research supplied does not give verified population counts, housing stock percentages or employer data for Laverton, which is not unusual for a small parish. Still, the setting tells you plenty. This is the sort of place that suits renters who like walking routes, fresh air and a slower pattern to the day. Shops, services and bigger supermarkets are more likely to sit in nearby towns, so travel time needs to be part of the decision. If country living suits you, and a bit of planning ahead does not bother you, Laverton can feel very easy to live with.

For families, schooling is likely to mean looking outside Laverton itself. Small rural communities often depend on nearby primaries, secondaries and sixth forms across the wider North Yorkshire area, so catchments and transport can matter just as much as the address. North Yorkshire Council is the place to check admissions policies, school transport eligibility and application dates. We would sort likely school routes before falling for a house, not afterwards.
No verified school names or Ofsted results for this exact village were included in the research pack, so we have not filled the gap with guesses. The practical questions still matter, though: bus availability, winter journey times, and whether a school run still works in poor weather. Sixth form and further education choices will usually be in larger settlements across the county, which makes transport planning more important for older pupils. A lovely rental can quickly feel wrong if every weekday starts with a long, awkward drive.

Public transport in a rural North Yorkshire village is often light, and Laverton is likely to work best for renters who expect to drive for most daily trips. Buses, if available, may be far less frequent than in a town, which affects commuting, evenings out and weekend shopping. For anyone travelling across the county, the real test is the full weekly pattern, not just the location of the nearest stop. Try the commute at the time you would actually use it.
Parking deserves a proper look at viewings, particularly where a home sits on a narrow lane or shares access with neighbours. Rural roads feel different after dark and in winter, with tighter verges, fewer lights and more weather to think about. Cycling may be perfectly possible in this sort of landscape, but confidence on quiet lanes counts for more than dedicated cycle routes. In a village rental, transport usually works because the road access is clear and the parking is genuine, not because buses do all the heavy lifting.

Begin with a rental budget agreement in principle, so your monthly ceiling, deposit and move-in costs are clear before you start choosing favourites.
Broadband, parking, school routes, travel times and the number of car journeys needed for shopping, work and appointments should all be checked early.
At the viewing, ask about heating type, water pressure, mobile signal, access roads and how the place copes in winter, not only how it feels on a bright day.
Before paying anything, read the tenancy agreement, inventory, EPC and landlord instructions, then check the deposit terms are written down clearly.
Good rural rentals do not always hang around, so have ID, income evidence and tenant referencing details ready before you put in an offer.
Utilities, contents insurance, council tax and the exit plan for your current home are worth sorting early, so moving day does not turn into a scramble.
City-flat checklists do not quite fit rural homes. In Laverton, we would start with the building: an older cottage may have real character, but it can also mean thicker walls, timber details, weaker insulation and heating that costs more to run. Ask whether the property uses oil, LPG or mains gas, and get clear on who deals with tanks, boilers and chimneys. A stone house can be a wonderful place to rent, provided the running costs are not a surprise.
Drainage, damp and outside space need more attention in a village setting. If the home is on a lane or in an exposed spot, ask about flooding, standing water after heavy rain, blocked ditches and gardens that become waterlogged. Conservation-style restrictions may matter too, especially if windows, roofs or exterior paintwork cannot be altered freely. With shared yards, outbuildings or driveways, agree at the viewing who uses each space, who cuts the grass and who deals with repairs.

We do not have a verified average rent for Laverton, North Yorkshire in the supplied research, so live stock on home.co.uk is the safest guide. In a small village, asking rents can jump around between a compact cottage, a converted barn and a detached home with gardens or parking. A quick live search is usually more useful than waiting for a single average that may say little about such a small market. Get your rental budget agreement in principle lined up before viewings if you want to compare homes properly.
Council tax bands are attached to individual properties, not to the village as a whole. In Laverton, the band will depend on the home’s size, age and valuation history, with the bill linked to the relevant North Yorkshire council arrangements. The landlord or listing should confirm the band before you sign. For a rural cottage or larger family house, check it alongside the rent so the monthly total stays realistic.
Because the supplied research does not name specific schools for this exact village, families should check primary and secondary options across the wider North Yorkshire area. In a small rural place, catchment maps, admissions timing and school transport can matter more than they would in a town with several schools nearby. Ofsted reports should be checked directly as well, since the closest-looking school on a map may still be awkward on winter mornings. If children are moving with you, the school run belongs in the decision from day one.
Limited public transport is likely, which is typical for a small North Yorkshire village. Most renters will want a car for commuting, shopping and evenings out, and bus times may not fit a busy weekday routine. If you rely on public transport, test the timetable against the journeys you actually make, not just an off-peak example. Laverton is more likely to suit people who are happy to plan ahead than those who need a turn-up-and-go service.
Yes, if the aim is rural living, more space and a quieter pace. Laverton is likely to appeal to renters who want countryside views, a village atmosphere and homes that feel set apart from larger towns. It is a weaker fit if walkable shops, regular buses or a short city-centre commute are non-negotiable. Judge the property against the day-to-day life you want, not just the rent shown on the listing.
For a rental move, budget for a holding deposit if you reserve the home, a security deposit, the first month’s rent and normal moving costs such as removals and utility set-up. In England, the tenancy deposit is normally capped at five weeks’ rent for most assured shorthold tenancies. If you later weigh this against buying locally, 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, with first-time buyer relief applying up to £425,000 and tapering to £625,000.
Small villages can move quicker than expected because there may only be a handful of homes available at any one time. If a Laverton property fits your budget, parking needs and commute, view promptly and have your documents ready. Homes that sit around often have a trade-off, perhaps higher heating costs, awkward access or a layout that does not fit modern living. A prepared renter usually beats an ideal applicant who is slow to act.
Upfront costs in Laverton usually mean the holding deposit, tenancy deposit, first month’s rent and whatever you spend on moving day. Even on a small village home, the total can climb once removals, utility deposits, furniture and contents insurance are added. A higher-spec cottage or larger detached house may tie up more money in month one simply because the rent is higher. Get the whole figure clear before you accept an offer.
Some rural running costs are easy to miss during a quick viewing. Heating fuel, broadband installation, driveway maintenance and extra trips to shops can all alter the monthly budget, even where the advertised rent looks comfortable. If you are comparing renting with buying nearby, remember that 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, with first-time buyer relief applying up to £425,000 and tapering to £625,000. For renters, budget beyond the headline rent so move-in day does not leave you stretched.

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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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