Browse 122 rental homes to rent in Warwick, Warwick from local letting agents.
The Warwick property market offers detached, semi-detached, and terraced houses spanning various price ranges and neighbourhoods. Each listing includes detailed property information, photographs, and direct contact with the marketing agent.
£1,298/m
8
2
26
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 8 results for Houses to rent in Warwick, Warwick. 2 new listings added this week. The median asking price is £1,298/month.
Source: home.co.uk
Terraced
6 listings
Avg £1,237
Detached
1 listings
Avg £2,500
Semi-Detached
1 listings
Avg £1,300
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Warwick's rental market usually covers everything from compact flats to older terraces and larger family houses, which helps explain its appeal to a broad mix of tenants. On the sales side, homedata.co.uk records a 12-month price rise of 2% and about 450 property sales in the last year, so the market looks steady rather than overheated. That kind of balance often feeds through into lettings, with consistent interest from movers and long-term residents alike. Well-priced, well-presented rentals do not tend to sit around for long.
According to home.co.uk, several active new-build schemes in and around Warwick show just how varied the local stock is. St Mary's Place at Warwick Gates has 2, 3, 4 and 5 bedroom homes from £319,995 to £579,995, while The Pavilions at Gallows Hill is marketing 3, 4 and 5 bedroom homes from £399,995 to £699,995. Warwick Grange, also in CV34, ranges from £380,000 to £600,000 across 3, 4 and 5 bedroom homes. Even for renters, those schemes are a useful guide to where much of Warwick's newer housing is concentrated and the type of space many local residents want.
For renters, Warwick often comes down to 2 distinct routes, character and convenience, or easier upkeep and parking. Newer homes around CV34 tend to suit people after modern insulation, lower maintenance and practical layouts, while older streets near the centre bring charm, walkability and more of a lived-in feel. With both historic and newer stock in the town, headline size is not always the deciding factor. A short commute, a school run or the need for off-street parking can reshape the search completely.

With a population of 33,222 and 14,357 households, Warwick has enough going on without feeling too much. The housing stock is fairly balanced as well, with semi-detached homes at 33.1%, terraced homes at 28.1%, detached properties at 24.0% and flats, maisonettes or apartments at 14.2% according to the 2021 census. That gives singles, couples and families genuine choice. On many residential streets, semis and terraces lead the mix, while flats are more common near the centre and in newer schemes.
Warwick Castle, the River Avon and a run of conservation streets built in red brick and sandstone give the town its unmistakable identity. The historic centre makes an impression straight away, but everyday life here is practical too, with supermarkets, independent shops, cafes, healthcare and service businesses all close by. Tourism, Warwick Hospital, education, retail and professional services all support the local economy, giving the place a reliable daytime rhythm. It feels lived in all week, not only at weekends.
Green space is a real part of daily life in Warwick, with riverside walks, local parks and nearby countryside helping to offset the built-up areas. Warwick Gates and the wider CV34 neighbourhoods lean more modern in layout, while older streets include Georgian, Victorian and pre-1919 homes with plenty of character. For people who want an established place with a recognisable centre and easy reach across Warwickshire, Warwick fits naturally. From what our team sees, many tenants settle here and stay.

For many families, the first question is schools, and Warwick has a strong reputation on that front. Warwick School and King's High School are the best-known independent choices, while Myton School provides an important state secondary option. There is also a good spread of primaries across the town and surrounding residential areas, including newer estates such as Warwick Gates. Catchment lines matter, so we always suggest checking the exact address before you book a viewing.
Schooling shapes the rental market here more than people sometimes expect. Many tenants want a home that keeps the morning routine straightforward, whether that means a short walk, somewhere to park for drop-offs or enough room for bikes and buggies. We always recommend checking admission arrangements direct with each school, because boundaries and availability can change. That matters in any part of town, but especially if you are comparing the historic core with the newer CV34 developments.
South Warwickshire's further education and training options add another practical draw for older students and working adults. The area also has education employers, which helps underpin rental demand alongside the wider jobs market. For renters with children, careful planning usually pays off, because the best home is not always the cheapest one, it is the one that makes school runs and everyday life simpler. Often, the right location saves more time than the rent difference costs.

Road links are one of Warwick's strengths. The A46 and M40 are both nearby, giving drivers straightforward routes towards Coventry, Birmingham, Stratford-upon-Avon and the wider Midlands. Rail is useful too, with both Warwick and Warwick Parkway serving the town for commuting and daily travel. That gives residents a choice between central convenience and more of a park-and-ride style setup. If regular journeys are part of life, the address can matter just as much as the property type.
Parking is something drivers should think about early, particularly in the historic centre or on streets affected by conservation restrictions. Older layouts, narrow roads and visitor demand can make on-street spaces competitive, so off-street parking is a genuine plus for many households. On the edge of town, newer developments are often easier for car owners, while central terraces tend to suit renters who walk or cycle more. If you travel for work regularly, it makes sense to match the property to the route before committing.
Bus links make local travel and school runs easier, although the strongest service patterns are usually on the main corridors. Cycling can suit shorter trips well, especially between residential areas and the centre, and the river corridor offers some pleasant day-to-day routes. Anyone commuting to Birmingham, Coventry or the science and business parks around Warwickshire should weigh up both station access and car access, because the right address can save a surprising amount of time over a year. That sort of planning helps keep a Warwick rent working hard for you.
Start by getting a rental budget agreement in principle, then narrow the search between a town-centre flat, a terrace near the river or a newer house on the edge of CV34.
Before you book, compare parking, school catchments, station access and flood exposure, especially near the River Avon or within the conservation area.
Modern family homes and well-kept period lets often draw strong interest, so an early shortlist can help you move before another tenant gets there first.
Keep ID, income evidence and references ready to go, because letting agents often move applications along quickly once they have found the right tenant.
During viewings, watch for damp, roof wear, heating performance and signs of previous movement, especially in older red-brick or sandstone homes.
Before handover, photograph the property, confirm meter readings and arrange utilities, council tax and broadband, so day one does not come with avoidable surprises.
Older Warwick rentals can be full of charm, but the age of the housing means it is sensible to check for damp, roof wear, timber issues and outdated electrics. Many homes are built in local red brick, sandstone or solid-wall construction, so heating and ventilation can matter more than they would in a modern block. If you are viewing a flat, ask about service arrangements, communal repairs and how quickly the landlord or agent deals with problems. Those details often matter more to comfort than the décor does.
Homes near the River Avon and in lower-lying parts of town need a closer look for flood risk, because both river flooding and surface water can affect nearby properties after heavy rain. Warwick's local geology is Mercia Mudstone, a clay-rich formation with moderate to high shrink-swell risk, so cracking or movement should not be brushed aside. Mature trees, shallow foundations and older extensions can all add to the pressure, particularly in houses altered over time. A careful viewing, followed by a condition-led check, can prevent trouble later.
St Mary's Place, The Pavilions and Warwick Grange give renters a different style of home, often with better insulation, modern kitchens and more predictable maintenance. Even so, it is worth checking parking allocations, bin storage, estate rules and any garden or communal area responsibilities. Warwick's conservation areas and listed buildings are part of what makes the town attractive, but they can restrict changes, so ask what is and is not allowed before signing. The right rental choice is the one that suits your lifestyle and the practical realities of the building.
We do not have a verified live average rent figure for Warwick in the research pack, so we would rather not guess. homedata.co.uk does show an average house price of £385,892, which helps explain why rents can vary so much between flats, terraces and larger family homes. In practice, homes near the centre, Warwick Parkway and the newer CV34 schemes tend to attract different levels of demand. For the latest asking rent, our live search is the best place to look.
Because Warwick sits within Warwick District, council tax banding is set by the local authority and depends on the individual property, not only the postcode. A flat in a newer development can fall into a very different band from a period townhouse or a detached family home. We always advise checking the exact band with the agent or landlord before signing, because it affects the monthly budget. It is also sensible to ask whether the bill is spread monthly or over ten months.
Among renters, Warwick School and King's High School are often the first names people mention, with Myton School another key secondary option locally. The town and newer estates are also served by a number of primaries, so the right choice depends as much on the property address as the school itself. Catchments do move, and both independent and state options shape family demand here. If schooling matters, we would narrow the shortlist before arranging viewings.
For a town of its size, Warwick is very well connected. Warwick and Warwick Parkway provide useful rail options, and the A46 and M40 are both close for road travel. That setup makes commuting towards Birmingham, Coventry and the wider Midlands fairly straightforward for many residents. Bus links are strongest on the main corridors, cycling works for shorter everyday trips, and parking is often tighter in the centre, so transport needs can easily influence the best street to target.
Yes, Warwick is a strong rental option for people who want history, good schools and dependable access to work and services. The population is 33,222, there are 14,357 households, and homedata.co.uk records around 450 sales in the last 12 months, all of which point to a settled but active market. Prices have also moved steadily, with a 2% rise over the last year rather than a sudden spike. That balance tends to appeal to renters looking for long-term value in where they live.
In England, a tenancy deposit is usually capped at five weeks' rent, while a holding deposit is usually one week's rent. You may also need the first month's rent, referencing checks and an inventory report before moving in. For a newer flat or house, ask whether estate rules, parking charges or maintenance responsibilities add anything to the budget. Sorting a rental budget agreement in principle early can help avoid last-minute surprises.
The historic centre tends to attract people who want character, walkability and easy reach of shops and restaurants. Warwick Gates, Gallows Hill and the wider CV34 areas usually appeal more to tenants wanting newer homes, parking and modern layouts. Homes near Warwick and Warwick Parkway are also consistently popular with commuters. The best area really depends on whether convenience, space or lower maintenance matters most to you.
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Before booking viewings in Warwick, compare carefully what you can actually afford.
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For an older home, this can be useful if you want a fuller condition check before committing to a long let.
A tenancy deposit is often the biggest upfront cost after the first month's rent, so it is worth planning for before you even start booking viewings. In Warwick, that matters because desirable homes can move quickly, especially better-kept terraces, central flats and newer family houses around CV34. With the budget sorted early, you are in a better position to act confidently when the right place comes up. That is where a rental budget agreement in principle can make the search feel much smoother.
What you spend after moving in can also depend heavily on the type of home you choose in Warwick. Older terraces and sandstone properties may be lovely to live in but cost more to heat, while newer estates can mean less maintenance but still bring parking or estate rules. If you are taking a flat, ask whether communal areas, gardens or bin stores are included in the rent, because that affects the real monthly cost. Council tax, broadband, utilities and parking all need to sit within the wider budget, not just the advertised rent.
Live search data on home.co.uk shows new-build asking prices from £319,995 at St Mary's Place up to £699,995 at The Pavilions, which helps explain the range in landlord expectations across Warwick. Sale values from homedata.co.uk, including £205,000 for flats and £600,000 for detached homes, also show why the most central or spacious rentals often carry a premium. It makes sense to budget with those gaps in mind, then compare bills, council tax and transport costs as well as the headline rent. A clear plan at the start usually leads to a calmer move later.
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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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