
Living guide
🌳Greenest Places to Live in the UK
Living near green space is not just pleasant, it is measurably good for you. Research consistently links access to parks, woodland, and open countryside with lower stress, better mental health, improved cardiovascular fitness, and stronger community bonds. For families, green space means safe places to play; for dog owners, it means daily walks without a car journey; for everyone, it means cleaner air, cooler summers, and a more attractive place to come home to.
What "green" means in practice varies hugely from one town to the next, though. A place can have generous public parks within the town boundary and almost no countryside around it, or the opposite: a compact urban grid surrounded by open fields. Both score well in casual conversation, but they offer very different day-to-day experiences.
How we measure green space
Our green space rankings draw on two distinct measures. Green space percentage captures the proportion of urban land within an area that is parkland, playing fields, allotments, cemeteries, or other publicly accessible green space, sourced from ONS and Ordnance Survey mapping data. Green land percentage captures the wider picture: farmland, woodland, moorland, and nature reserves within and around the area. Together they tell you whether you get daily-walk greenery, big-weekend greenery, or both.
The 0 to 100 Green Space score blends the two, weighted toward accessibility. An area with modest urban parks but 80 per cent surrounding countryside scores very well. A dense town centre with a couple of good parks and almost no open country around it scores in the middle. An urban grid with neither lands near the bottom.
Where the greenest places are
Smaller towns and semi-rural areas dominate the top of the league, particularly on the fringes of the Peak District, the Welsh Marches, and the Lake District. The Scottish Borders and North Yorkshire also punch above their population weight. Some larger towns perform surprisingly well too, usually because of generous Victorian parks, meaningful river corridors, or strong green-belt protections that stopped urban sprawl in the twentieth century.
Cities can still score respectably. Sheffield, famously, claims the highest proportion of urban green space of any major UK city, and Edinburgh, Bristol, and Cardiff all have pockets that outperform the national urban average. The pattern that emerges is less about rural versus urban and more about how much a place has historically protected open land from development.
What to look for
Read both metrics side by side, not just the headline score. A town might have modest urban green space but be surrounded by stunning countryside, or it might be a compact urban area with excellent parks and allotments but little true countryside on the doorstep. Figure out which one you actually want. The strongest picks tend to offer both: a park within ten minutes' walk and open fields within ten minutes' drive.
How we rank: Ranked by our Green Space dimension score (0–100), derived from green space percentage within urban boundaries and surrounding green land coverage.
📊
20
Areas Ranked
🏠
£310k
Avg House Price
🌳
65/100
Avg Green Space Score
📍
Yorkshire and the Humber
Top Region
Green Metrics Comparison
Green space vs green land for the top 5 areas
London
Cambridge
Manchester
Oxford
Bristol
Where they are.
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Top 20 Greenest Places
Did you know?
The top 20 greenest areas have an average of 3% urban green space: that's parks, playing fields, and allotments within the built-up area.
Did you know?
These areas are surrounded by an average of 35% green land, including farmland, woodland, and nature reserves.
Did you know?
Green areas tend to have cleaner air too: the average air quality index across these top areas is 69/100.
Can you afford these areas?
Top 10 by Green Space Score
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