Postcode sector · CH48 1

Is Newton a good place to live?

70 postcodes · 70 postcodes

In Newton (CH48 1), recorded crime is 95% below the national average, homes sell for around £961,625 on average, flood risk from rivers and the sea is medium, and it ranks as one of the less deprived parts of the country (deprivation decile 10/10, where 1 is most deprived).

Official UK open data · crime to 2026-04 · HM Land Registry, Police.uk, Environment Agency, GIAS/Ofsted, ONS 2021. Free to browse.

Flood risk in Newton CH48 1

Flood risk from rivers and the sea in Newton CH48 1 is rated medium. Around 1.0% of properties (8 of 791) sit in a modelled flood zone, of which 3 are at significant risk.

Source: Environment Agency, Risk of Flooding from Rivers and Sea, updated 2026-06-27. Surface-water and groundwater flooding are modelled separately and are not included here. Commission an official flood search before purchase.

Sold-price trend (1995–2026)

1995: mean £133,210, median £115,000 (25 sales)1996: mean £134,574, median £116,500 (25 sales)1997: mean £192,467, median £177,000 (15 sales)1998: mean £207,158, median £212,500 (12 sales)1999: mean £255,679, median £300,000 (31 sales)2000: mean £304,983, median £327,500 (35 sales)2001: mean £331,366, median £291,000 (32 sales)2002: mean £332,500, median £375,000 (23 sales)2003: mean £362,242, median £345,000 (16 sales)2004: mean £522,235, median £450,000 (17 sales)2005: mean £508,908, median £522,500 (19 sales)2006: mean £526,038, median £498,190 (17 sales)2007: mean £655,139, median £520,000 (9 sales)2008: mean £613,700, median £563,000 (12 sales)2009: mean £397,143, median £310,000 (7 sales)2010: mean £609,143, median £680,000 (14 sales)2011: mean £605,024, median £625,000 (21 sales)2012: mean £585,000, median £650,000 (5 sales)2013: mean £379,167, median £395,000 (9 sales)2014: mean £431,975, median £395,000 (20 sales)2015: mean £632,571, median £628,500 (18 sales)2016: mean £632,118, median £645,000 (17 sales)2017: mean £641,895, median £660,000 (29 sales)2018: mean £516,375, median £525,000 (16 sales)2019: mean £660,821, median £692,500 (14 sales)2020: mean £838,748, median £727,500 (20 sales)2021: mean £826,758, median £775,000 (31 sales)2022: mean £1,101,273, median £1,050,000 (22 sales)2023: mean £935,196, median £900,000 (23 sales)2024: mean £961,625, median £822,500 (18 sales)2025: mean £758,529, median £795,000 (17 sales)2026: mean £850,000, median £850,000 (1 sale)1995: mean £133,210, median £115,000 (25 sales)1996: mean £134,574, median £116,500 (25 sales)1997: mean £192,467, median £177,000 (15 sales)1998: mean £207,158, median £212,500 (12 sales)1999: mean £255,679, median £300,000 (31 sales)2000: mean £304,983, median £327,500 (35 sales)2001: mean £331,366, median £291,000 (32 sales)2002: mean £332,500, median £375,000 (23 sales)2003: mean £362,242, median £345,000 (16 sales)2004: mean £522,235, median £450,000 (17 sales)2005: mean £508,908, median £522,500 (19 sales)2006: mean £526,038, median £498,190 (17 sales)2007: mean £655,139, median £520,000 (9 sales)2008: mean £613,700, median £563,000 (12 sales)2009: mean £397,143, median £310,000 (7 sales)2010: mean £609,143, median £680,000 (14 sales)2011: mean £605,024, median £625,000 (21 sales)2012: mean £585,000, median £650,000 (5 sales)2013: mean £379,167, median £395,000 (9 sales)2014: mean £431,975, median £395,000 (20 sales)2015: mean £632,571, median £628,500 (18 sales)2016: mean £632,118, median £645,000 (17 sales)2017: mean £641,895, median £660,000 (29 sales)2018: mean £516,375, median £525,000 (16 sales)2019: mean £660,821, median £692,500 (14 sales)2020: mean £838,748, median £727,500 (20 sales)2021: mean £826,758, median £775,000 (31 sales)2022: mean £1,101,273, median £1,050,000 (22 sales)2023: mean £935,196, median £900,000 (23 sales)2024: mean £961,625, median £822,500 (18 sales)2025: mean £758,529, median £795,000 (17 sales)2026: mean £850,000, median £850,000 (1 sale) MeanMedian £1,101,273 £115,000 1995 2026*

Annual sold price in CH48 1, 1995–2026 — mean (blue) and median (terracotta). The median is the typical sale; a wide gap to the mean means a few high-value sales pull the average up. 2026 is a part year (1 sales so far). Hover a point for both figures. Source: HM Land Registry Price Paid.

Recorded crime trend

May 24: 1 crimesOct 24: 2 crimesNov 24: 2 crimesDec 24: 1 crimesFeb 25: 1 crimesApr 25: 2 crimesMay 25: 3 crimesJun 25: 1 crimesAug 25: 1 crimesSep 25: 1 crimesNov 25: 1 crimesDec 25: 1 crimesJan 26: 3 crimesApr 26: 1 crimes Apr 26: 1 crimes 3 1 May 24 Apr 26

Recorded crimes per month in CH48 1 (May 24–Apr 26, average 2/month). Hover a point to read the count. Source: Police.uk street-level data.

Who lives here

Median age
54
One-person households
29%
Households with children
23%
Households
5,101

Owned 89% · Social rent 2% · Private rent 9%

Census 2021 (ONS), for CH48 1.

Browse postcodes

Nearby areas

Newton CH48 1: frequently asked questions

Is Newton CH48 1 a good place to live?

In Newton (CH48 1), recorded crime is 95% below the national average, homes sell for around £961,625 on average, flood risk from rivers and the sea is medium, and it ranks as one of the less deprived parts of the country (deprivation decile 10/10, where 1 is most deprived).

What is the crime rate in Newton CH48 1?

Recorded crime in Newton CH48 1 runs at 14.3 per 1,000 properties, 95% below the national average (Police.uk, 2026-04).

Is Newton CH48 1 safe?

Crime in Newton CH48 1 is below the national average. Recorded crime in Newton CH48 1 runs at 14.3 per 1,000 properties, 95% below the national average (Police.uk, 2026-04).

How much are house prices in Newton CH48 1?

Homes in Newton CH48 1 sell for around £961,625 on average, based on 18 recorded sales (HM Land Registry).

Is Newton CH48 1 at risk of flooding?

Flood risk from rivers and the sea in Newton CH48 1 is rated medium. Around 1.0% of properties (8 of 791) sit in a modelled flood zone, of which 3 are at significant risk.

Is Newton CH48 1 a deprived area?

Newton CH48 1 sits in deprivation decile 10 of 10 (1 = most deprived), making it one of the less deprived areas in England (English Indices of Deprivation, ONS).