Best Countryside Areas Near London
A grounded guide to countryside areas near London, with clear trade-offs between train access, price, village feel, schools and how much of a true escape you will really get.
These pages are for readers who still need the city to remain plausible. The best answers are not the prettiest ones on a weekend drive; they are the places that still feel rural while keeping the commute, school run and day-to-day errands survivable.
It ranges from extremely polished commuter villages that are effectively lifestyle suburbs, to market towns and edge-of-county areas where you can still get greenery, trains and a more believable sense of leaving the city behind. Your job is not to find the prettiest option. It is to find the cheapest compromise you can actually live with.
What actually counts as “near London”
For some households, near London means a train that gets you to the office once or twice a week. For others, it means one hour door to door and zero drama. Those are very different searches. Before you shortlist anywhere, write down your real commute tolerance in both time and money. Be strict. A romantic village becomes less romantic when it adds four exhausted hours to your week every time you travel in.
Also be honest about what you are trying to preserve. Is this move mainly about more house? More green space? Better family life? Or do you want a stronger break from London culture itself? The answer changes where you should look.
The main types of near-London countryside move
| Move type | Best for | Typical downside |
|---|---|---|
| Fast-rail premium villages | High earners who still need regular access to central London | You often pay heavily for convenience and can end up with less “escape” than expected |
| Market towns with London access | Families and hybrid workers wanting balance | Need to check station parking, service frequency and whether the town is genuinely thriving |
| Outer-ring semi-rural areas | People willing to travel slightly more for better value | The practical burden grows quickly if the station is not close or reliable |
| Lifestyle-first countryside | People travelling only occasionally | Can be a false economy if you still end up commuting more than planned |
The real near-London comparison
| Option | Why people choose it | Usually works best for | Main trade-off |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chilterns / Bucks | Quickest route to postcard villages with strong rail logic | High earners who still go in often | You can pay heavily for the story of a move rather than for extra ease |
| Oxfordshire belts | Smarter market-town balance and strong schooling appeal | Families and hybrid commuters | The best places are rarely secret and rarely cheap |
| Kent / east-Kent arcs | More room to breathe and a wider range of price points | Readers who still need London but can accept a longer feel to the trip | "Near" can become a generous description once the train line is tested in real life |
| Hampshire / Sussex belts | Leafier, polished, often very liveable | People who want a softer countryside transition | Prestige can outrun practicality fast |
| Essex / Suffolk edge zones | Value and space without abandoning London entirely | Buyers who are more price-sensitive | You need to be honest about how much romance matters to you |
Areas worth comparing
1. The Chilterns and Buckinghamshire villages
Very strong for beauty, schools and access, but rarely good value. It suits households who know they want this exact mix and can afford it without strain. It is less convincing for buyers hoping to save money by leaving London.
2. Oxfordshire market towns and village belts
Good for people who want a more rounded life than pure commuter strip living. You often get a better combination of schools, high streets and countryside feel, though the better-known pockets are expensive.
3. Kent Weald and east-Kent market-town areas
Can work well if you want a rural identity and are selective about rail access. Some locations are excellent for hybrid commuters. Others feel close enough on a map but are awkward in reality.
4. Hampshire and north-west Sussex
Useful for families wanting countryside that still feels orderly and functional. It can offer a good blend of space, schools and day-to-day resilience, particularly if London travel is occasional rather than constant.
5. Hertfordshire, Bedfordshire and Cambridgeshire fringes
Often a pragmatic choice. You may sacrifice some postcard glamour, but you can gain easier logistics and sometimes better value. This is often where sensible buyers end up after looking at shinier options first.
6. Essex and Suffolk edge zones
Worth considering if you are willing to accept a slightly different landscape aesthetic in exchange for value and breathing space. Some areas are much stronger than their reputation suggests.
The biggest mistakes people make near London
- Paying for commute speed they do not use. If you go in once a fortnight, top-tier train access may not justify the premium.
- Ignoring door-to-door travel. A fast train does not help much if getting to the station is awkward or parking is a battle.
- Confusing expensive with special. Some near-London villages are lovely; some are simply expensive because demand is intense.
- Assuming near London means easy life. Housing pressure, competition and school demand can recreate the stress people thought they were leaving.
Who the near-London countryside move suits — and who it does not
This move works best for readers who still need London in the story but no longer want London in the middle of every day. It suits hybrid commuters, families, and people trying to buy space without abandoning access. It does not suit people who want a genuinely slower life yet still intend to organise everything around the capital; those readers often pay the commuter premium and keep most of the urban stress.
Readers who need one or two solid routes into London and care about schools, resale and ordinary practicality.
People who talk about escape but still choose entirely by train speed. That is often just a nicer wrapper on the same life.
Go one ring further out than your instinct, then see whether the better value buys enough extra calm to matter.
Near London is often where people spend the most money trying not to admit they are not quite ready to leave London.
How to use this shortlist next
To widen the search beyond the capital, read Best Countryside Areas in England. To work out whether the move really saves money, go to Commuting from the Countryside: What to Calculate First. For buying decisions, see Questions to Ask When Viewing a Rural Property.