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Search homes to rent in Probus, Cornwall. New listings are added daily by local letting agents.
One bed apartments provide a separate bedroom alongside distinct living space, bathroom, and kitchen areas. Properties in Probus are available in various building types including mansion blocks, contemporary developments, and house conversions.
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Showing 0 results for 1 Bedroom Flats to rent in Probus, Cornwall.
At the upper end of Probus pricing, detached houses are still well ahead of the rest, while terraces and semi-detached homes sit much closer together. homedata.co.uk puts the last 12 months at £388,750 for detached homes, £263,950 for terraced homes, and £260,500 for semi-detached homes, with the overall average at £313,893. That is a useful spread to keep in mind. Probus is not one neat market, it has larger family houses, smaller character homes and plenty in between, so the trade-off between space and monthly cost is a real one.
Renters in Probus are likely to see both period cottages and more modern houses, which gives a choice between charm and day-to-day practicality. I have not been able to verify any named new-build schemes inside the parish, so it is better to search the live village stock than assume there is a development-led market. The sales backdrop has cooled too, with the average sold figure 19% lower than the previous year and 16% below the 2023 high of £372,977. Owners often take that wider mood into account when setting rents, so it is worth watching.

Probus works first as a village, then as a commuter base. The research describes it as convenient and popular, with excellent village facilities, which says quite a lot about its everyday pull. You do not get the same feel here as you would on a large estate on the edge of a bigger town. Streets tend to feel more personal, the pace a little steadier, and people who know the village tend to stay connected to it.
The buildings help give Probus that mixed look. Older cottages, including period semi-detached homes, sit near modern detached and semi-detached houses, so the parish has more variety than a single-style estate. The research pack did not verify specific data on geology, shrink-swell risk, or flood hotspots, which means our team would still treat address-level checks as important. For most renters, that is simply sensible due diligence, making sure the lane, plot and setting work as well as the house itself.
Cornwall’s rural pattern shapes daily life here, and the main road network matters almost as much as the village centre. Truro and the surrounding countryside stay relevant for food shopping, work, appointments and weekends. That gives Probus a useful balance, a quieter base without feeling cut off from services. Space, calmer streets and access to wider Cornwall are the main attractions.

For families, the exact address should come before any assumption about schools. I could not verify specific Ofsted ratings or catchment maps in the research data, so the safest check is with Cornwall Council admissions for the property you are considering. In and around a village, a short drive or bus journey can alter the practical choices quite quickly. Postcode-level research matters more than a broad village reputation.
Most families start with village primary provision, then look at the workable secondary route towards Truro or nearby areas. Because Probus sits in rural Cornwall, it is normal to look beyond the parish boundary, particularly where sixth form or college travel is part of the week. The closest school on a map is not always the best fit. Age, admissions priority and the school run all have to line up.
With older children, the transport to post-16 education can be just as important as the name of the school or college. That is why we suggest getting a rental budget agreement in principle sorted early, before the strongest homes are taken by other applicants. Once the likely school route is clear, you can judge parking, bus stops and morning timings properly. It makes the move feel grounded, not just hopeful.

Probus sits in central Cornwall, so travel is mostly shaped by roads rather than a dense rail timetable. It suits people who are comfortable mixing car journeys with local buses and occasional rail connections through Truro. I have not used verified journey-time data here, so this should be read as a location guide, not a timetable. Anyone commuting should test the actual route at the point they plan to move.
Road access is one of the village’s practical advantages. Local lanes connect Probus with nearby towns and the wider A390 corridor, keeping Truro and St Austell within reach for work, shopping and services. A house with a drive or private parking may feel very different from an older cottage on a narrower lane with limited on-street space. If you use the car every day, that detail can outweigh a few minutes on the route.
Public transport is useful for some journeys, but it will not give every household door-to-door flexibility. Rail users will usually be thinking in terms of Truro station, with the final leg handled by bus, taxi or car. Cycling tends to suit short local trips and quiet-lane exploring more than quick commuting. Where there is more than one commuter at home, parking, access and route choice often decide which property works best.
Get a rental budget agreement in principle before viewings, then set a proper ceiling for rent, bills, deposit and moving costs.
Weigh up village-centre convenience against quieter edges, including parking, garden space and the access you need day to day.
Try to visit at different times of day, because road space, light and local noise can feel very different in a village setting.
Have ID, income evidence, employer details and references ready, so our team can help you move quickly when the right home appears.
Read the deposit terms, break clause and inventory carefully, and check any rules on pets, parking or outside space.
Sort utilities, council tax and address changes early, so your first week in Probus feels under control rather than rushed.
Older homes are part of the appeal in Probus, but they deserve a closer look than a brand-new flat. With period cottages, I would pay early attention to damp, roof condition, heating efficiency and draughts. If the viewing is for a flat or a leasehold house, ask about service charges, ground rent and responsibility for communal repairs. In a smaller village market, those costs are harder to benchmark because there may be fewer close comparisons.
Address-level checks are sensible for flood risk, drainage and access, especially as the research pack does not confirm specific hotspots. A home can look perfect online and still feel awkward if parking is tight or a lane is difficult in winter. Conservation status and any listed-building restrictions were not confirmed here either, so ask the agent whether planning limits affect windows, extensions or exterior changes. It is the sort of thing people only spot after falling for the location.
Energy performance is worth watching in a parish where older housing stock sits alongside newer builds. A well-insulated modern house may suit a long-term renter who wants more predictable bills, while a character cottage may suit someone happy to accept a little compromise for period detail. Broadband, storage, the garden and the driveway all deserve the same attention as the floor plan. In Probus, the right rental is the one that still works on an ordinary wet Tuesday.
I do not have a verified average asking rent for Probus in the research pack, so the best live check is home.co.uk. The sales context is clearer: homedata.co.uk records an average sold price of £313,893 over the last year, with detached homes at £388,750 and semis or terraces close to the mid-£260,000s. That points to a varied village market. One rental asking price can look very different from another once size, parking and condition are taken into account.
Council tax in Probus is charged by Cornwall Council, but the band belongs to the individual property, not the village as a whole. A smaller cottage may sit in a lower band, while a larger detached home is often higher, so check the address before committing. If the listing does not show the band, ask the agent to confirm it while you are viewing. Council tax can change the monthly budget almost as much as the rent.
I could not verify a ranked school list or Ofsted ratings from the research data, so the postcode is the piece to focus on. Families normally compare the nearest primary option first, then look at the most practical secondary and sixth-form routes into the surrounding area. Cornwall Council admissions and Ofsted pages are the right places to confirm what serves the address. In a village setting, catchment lines can affect choice very quickly.
Probus is stronger for road travel than rail-based commuting, which is fairly typical for a rural Cornish village. Bus services and rail connections through Truro are part of the picture, but the timetable needs checking against your real working hours before you sign. Drivers should look closely at parking and lane access, not only journey length. The key question is whether the transport pattern matches your week.
Yes, Probus can suit you if you want a quieter village base with useful day-to-day facilities and access to wider Cornwall. It feels settled, with period cottages and modern homes sitting in the same local market, and the research describes it as convenient and popular. homedata.co.uk also shows values have cooled from the 2023 peak, which may help when you are weighing setting against value. It is a better fit for renters who like countryside surroundings than for anyone chasing a city-centre pace.
For most private rentals in England, the tenancy deposit is capped at 5 weeks' rent if the annual rent is below £50,000, and there may also be a holding deposit plus the first month's rent. Ask what is included before applying, because utilities, council tax or optional extras can sit outside the tenancy itself. If buying in Probus becomes the next step, the 2024-25 stamp duty bands 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.
I could not verify any named new-build developments within the parish from the research pack. That points to a market led more by existing cottages, family houses and occasional newer homes than by large apartment schemes. If new-build features are important, ask home.co.uk agents whether any fresh listings match that brief. In a village of this size, those homes may not hang around.
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Moving into a Probus rental usually means paying a holding deposit, a tenancy deposit and the first month's rent. In England, the deposit cap is usually 5 weeks' rent for annual rents below £50,000, so the upfront total follows the monthly asking price rather than the village name. A rental budget agreement in principle is useful here because it gives you a firm ceiling instead of a guess. It also leaves space for council tax, utilities, broadband, parking and commuting costs.
Price point matters, especially if you are comparing a larger detached house with a smaller terrace or cottage. The sold data for Probus shows that gap clearly, with detached homes averaging £388,750 and terraces or semis around £260,000 to £264,000. For renters, that can mean bigger rooms, more storage and sometimes more outdoor space, but it may also mean a higher tenancy deposit. A careful budget now can stop an attractive property becoming a stretched first month.
If you are thinking about buying later, keep the 2024-25 stamp duty bands in view. The current 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, while first-time buyers get 0% up to £425,000 and 5% from £425,000 to £625,000. It will not alter your rental application, but it is useful if renting in Probus is a short step towards ownership. In a village market like this, rent and future buying costs are best considered together.

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