Resources

Planning tools and practical guides worth keeping open.

Use this page once you already know the question you are trying to answer. Start with the tools if you still need clarity. Move into the checks and practical guides once you have a real shortlist, property or postcode in play.

Most readers should arrive here after Start Here

Use the tools first when you still need clarity, then move into official checks and practical guides once the shortlist, property or postcode is real enough to test properly.

Follow the route

How to use the resources page well

This page works best when you pair one site tool with one official check or one practical guide. That keeps the move moving without becoming a tab explosion.

Site tools first

Use the fit, shortlist, cost and property tools to make the move more specific.

Official checks next

Use checkers when there is a real postcode, provider or planning question on the table.

Practical guides when the move narrows

The service and lived-experience guides work best once the shortlist or house is real enough to test.

Core tools

Use these to make the move more specific.

Each one is meant to answer a different kind of uncertainty: fit, shortlist, first-year money or property practicality.

Tool

Countryside Suitability Quiz

Work out whether you are really looking for near-city countryside, a market-town base, village life or something deeper-rural.

Open the quiz →
Flagship tool

Countryside Shortlist Builder

Compare places side by side, weight what matters most and keep notes on what is genuinely strong versus what is being romanticised.

Open the builder →
Flagship tool

First-Year Rural Cost Planner

Map move-week costs, setup, monthly drift, annual buffers and a simple stress test in one view.

Open the planner →
Tool

Rural Property Practicality Scorecard

Score a listing or viewing while you can still think straight, with red flags and notes that do not hide behind charm.

Open the scorecard →
Official checks

Use these before you trust anyone’s summary.

Open them when you have a real postcode, a real property or a genuinely narrowing shortlist.

Find and update company checker

Useful if broadband is mission-critical and you want to see what is actually planned rather than what a listing suggests.

Open checker →

Flood and environmental checks

Use official map tools early when a property or area raises an obvious drainage, water or floodplain question.

Check flood risk →

Journey and route reality checks

Use actual route times, winter assumptions and repeat journeys rather than one optimistic drive on a clear day.

Open maps →
New practical resources

Useful once a postcode or property becomes real.

These are the tools for the parts of a move that usually stay fuzzy for too long: utilities, surrounding planning context and what to carry into a viewing.

New tool

Rural Utilities Checker

Pressure-test heating, EPC, water, drainage, access and outage resilience before a pretty house becomes an expensive one.

Open the utilities checker →
New tool

Planning and Nearby-Development Checker

Keep planning context, access, rights of way and change-risk in one clearer record while the property is still a choice.

Open the planning checker →
Printable pack

Printable Rural Viewing Pack

Bring questions, red flags and first-fix cost notes into one cleaner sheet for viewings and follow-up calls.

Open the viewing pack →
Practical guides

Open these when the move gets specific.

These are most useful once you have a shortlist, a property question, a quote to compare or a real household constraint in front of you.

Reality-check guides

Use these when you need the boring but decisive answers.

They cover the questions that quietly decide whether a move stays workable once school runs, services, weather and utility systems become real.

How to use this page well

Open one tool to get clearer, one official check when something specific needs verifying, and one practical guide when a real decision lands on the table.

Common mistake

Opening the service guides too early, before the shortlist, money picture or property question is clear enough to make them genuinely useful.

Go back to Start Here →
Build the right resource stack

Most people do better with one tool, one check and one practical guide.

That gives you a useful decision stack instead of fifteen tabs that all blur together.

Good combinations

Use these bundles when you want a quicker route through the site.

Each combination pairs a tool with the guide most likely to sharpen the same decision.