The average rent for a 1-bedroom flat in Liverpool is £750/month in 2026. This makes Liverpool approximately 64% cheaper than London — renting here instead of the capital saves around £16,200/year on housing alone.
Liverpool is part of Merseyside with a population of 500,000 city / 2.2M metro. Its economy is anchored by port logistics, digital/creative, healthcare (Royal Liverpool), tourism.
Average Rent by Property Type in Liverpool (2026)
| Property Type | Monthly Rent | Annual Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Room in shared house | £430 | £5,160 |
| Studio flat | £575 | £6,900 |
| 1-bedroom flat | £750 | £9,000 |
| 2-bedroom flat | £950 | £11,400 |
| 3-bedroom house | £1,200 | £14,400 |
These are average figures. City-centre new builds and recently refurbished properties typically run 15–25% above these averages; older or less central stock runs 10–20% below.
Average Rent by Area in Liverpool
| Area | 1-Bed Average | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| City Centre/L1 | £900/mo | New builds, Baltic Triangle proximity |
| Baltic Triangle | £850/mo | Creative quarter, trendy, growing |
| Ropewalks | £825/mo | Nightlife, young professionals |
| Waterfront/Pier Head | £900/mo | Premium views, newer stock |
| Toxteth/Dingle | £650/mo | Affordable, improving |
| Wavertree | £700/mo | Student/families, good value |
| Aigburth | £750/mo | Leafy south Liverpool, popular |
| West Derby | £650/mo | Affordable suburb, north east |
| Crosby (commuter) | £700/mo | Seaside, 20min Merseyrail |
Most expensive area: City Centre/L1 at £900/month.
Best value area: Crosby (commuter) at £700/month.
What Salary Do You Need to Rent in Liverpool?
The standard affordability rule is that rent should not exceed 30% of gross monthly income. Below is the minimum gross salary required for each property type, alongside the take-home pay needed.
| Property Type | Monthly Rent | Annual Rent | Salary Needed (30% rule) | Take-Home Needed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Room in shared house | £430/mo | £5,160/yr | £17,000 | £1,290/mo |
| Studio | £575/mo | £6,900/yr | £23,000 | £1,725/mo |
| 1-bedroom | £750/mo | £9,000/yr | £30,000 | £2,250/mo |
| 2-bed (per person) | £475/mo | £5,700/yr | £19,000 | £1,425/mo |
| 3-bed (per person) | £400/mo | £4,800/yr | £16,000 | £1,200/mo |
The National Living Wage in 2026/27 is £12.60/hour — equivalent to £26,208/year full-time. On that income, a room in a shared house (£430/month) costs 20% of gross income, within the 30% guideline. A 1-bedroom (£750/month) is 34% of NLW gross income.
How Liverpool Compares to Other UK Cities
| City | 1-Bed Average | Difference vs Liverpool |
|---|---|---|
| Liverpool | £750 | — |
| London | £2,100 | +180% vs Liverpool |
| Edinburgh | £1,100 | +47% vs Liverpool |
| Bristol | £1,050 | +40% vs Liverpool |
| Manchester | £1,000 | +33% vs Liverpool |
| Birmingham | £900 | +20% vs Liverpool |
| Leeds | £850 | +13% vs Liverpool |
| Glasgow | £800 | +7% vs Liverpool |
Liverpool is one of England’s most affordable major cities. Ongoing waterfront regeneration and a large student population keep demand strong while supply remains relatively affordable versus Manchester.
Monthly Budget in Liverpool
Based on a 1-bedroom flat at £750/month, a realistic monthly budget looks like this:
| Expense | Monthly Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Rent (1-bed flat) | £750 | City average |
| Council Tax (Band D, sole occupant) | £112 | 25% single occupant discount |
| Gas & electricity | £130 | Typical 2026 estimate |
| Water | £45 | Average UK water bill |
| Broadband | £35 | Standard package |
| Groceries | £220 | Solo household |
| Transport | £70 | Monthly pass or petrol |
| Phone | £30 | Mid-range SIM-only plan |
| Total before discretionary | £1,392 | Excludes leisure, savings |
To cover essential costs comfortably and save 10% of income, a Liverpool renter in a 1-bedroom flat needs a take-home pay of approximately £1,500/month, equating to a gross salary of around £25,000/year.
Getting to Work: Commute Times from Liverpool
| Destination | Journey Time |
|---|---|
| Manchester | 35min by train |
| London | 2h10m by train |
| Chester | 45min by train |
Liverpool has good regional rail connections. Most city-centre employers are within 30–45 minutes by public transport from most rental areas.
Rent Trends: How Liverpool Prices Have Changed
Liverpool rents have increased 7–9% per year since 2023, more moderately than Manchester and Bristol. The city’s large student population (5 universities) stabilises demand and keeps rents anchored. Baltic Triangle is seeing the steepest growth.
Key drivers of rent increases in Liverpool:
- Strong population growth and in-migration from other UK cities
- Insufficient new housing supply relative to demand
- Rising mortgage rates pushing potential buyers into the rental market
- Student population competing with working renters for city-centre stock
For the broader regional context, see the UK Average Rent by Region guide.
Tips for Renting in Liverpool
1. Move slightly out of the centre. Rents in West Derby or Crosby (commuter) are £50–£100/month cheaper than city-centre equivalents, with manageable commute times.
2. Consider a flat share. Splitting a 2-bedroom at £950/month costs £475/person — saving £275/month compared to a solo 1-bedroom.
3. Check before signing for deposit protection. UK landlords must protect deposits in a government-approved scheme (DPS, MyDeposits, or TDS) within 30 days. Failure to do so entitles tenants to compensation of 1–3× the deposit amount.
4. Budget for upfront costs. Expect to pay the first month’s rent plus a 5-week deposit upfront (the legal maximum under the Tenant Fees Act 2019). On a £750/month flat, that is approximately £1,612 before you move in.
5. Use Rightmove, Zoopla, and SpareRoom. These three platforms cover the overwhelming majority of Liverpool rentals. Set up alerts for your budget and preferred areas to get notified instantly.
Renting vs Buying in Liverpool
For renters wondering whether to buy, the numbers are more nuanced than they first appear.
Average house price in Liverpool: approximately £180,000 (2026).
| Scenario | Monthly Cost | Upfront Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Renting (1-bed) | £750 | £1,612 (1 month + 5-wk deposit) |
| Buying with 10% deposit (£18,000) | £900 | £19,200 (deposit + SDLT) |
| Buying with 5% deposit (£9,000) | £950 | £10,200 (deposit + SDLT) |
Mortgage figures based on a 25-year repayment at 4.5% interest. Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) applies. Figures are indicative.
Upfront buying costs in Liverpool include:
- 10% deposit: £18,000
- Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT): approximately £1,200 on a £180,000 home
- Solicitor / conveyancing fees: £1,500–£3,000
- Survey: £500–£1,500 (Homebuyer Report)
- Total upfront: approximately £22,100 minimum
Saving a 10% deposit while renting in Liverpool typically takes 3–5 years for a single person on a median salary, assuming consistent saving. The Mortgage Overpayment Calculator can show how extra payments reduce total interest once you do buy.
Best Areas in Liverpool by Budget
Budget Renters (under £650/month)
Best areas: West Derby or Toxteth. These areas offer solid transport links to the city centre without the city-centre premium. Typical 1-bedrooms run £600–£650/month.
Best for: Students, recent graduates, or anyone prioritising low rent over proximity. Bills and council tax often included in HMO (house in multiple occupation) rooms in these areas.
Mid-Range Renters (££650–£800/month)
Best areas: Wavertree or Aigburth. These neighbourhoods combine reasonable rents with strong local amenities — independent cafés, good restaurants, parks, and manageable commute times.
Best for: Professionals on a UK median salary (around £35,000/year, take-home ~£2,393/month), who want comfort without stretching to premium postcodes.
Premium Renters (£800+/month)
Best areas: Baltic Triangle or the City Centre. These are Liverpool’s most in-demand postcodes — expect modern new builds, better storage, and premium finishes. Competition is fierce; be ready to move fast on viewings.
Best for: Dual-income households, senior professionals, or those who prioritise location quality above all else.
Summary by Lifestyle
| Renter Profile | Recommended Area |
|---|---|
| Student | Wavertree and the Ropewalks area |
| Young professional | Baltic Triangle, Ropewalks, or Waterfront |
| Family | Aigburth, Crosby, or West Derby |
Your Rights as a Renter in the UK
UK tenants have strong legal protections regardless of which city you rent in:
- Deposit cap: Landlords may only charge a maximum of 5 weeks’ rent as a deposit (6 weeks if annual rent exceeds £50,000). This is set by the Tenant Fees Act 2019.
- Deposit protection: Deposits must be placed in a government-approved scheme — DPS, MyDeposits, or TDS — within 30 days of payment. Failure entitles tenants to 1–3× the deposit in compensation.
- Banned fees: Letting agents and landlords cannot charge referencing fees, admin fees, credit check fees, or check-in fees. Permitted charges are limited to rent, deposits, holding deposits (max 1 week), and certain default charges.
- Gas safety: Landlords must provide an annual Gas Safety Certificate and share it with tenants.
- Energy efficiency: All rental properties in England and Wales must have a minimum EPC rating of E. Properties rated F or G may not be legally let.
- Notice periods: Landlords must give at least 2 months’ written notice (Section 21) or prove grounds under Section 8 to end a tenancy.
If your landlord fails to meet these obligations, you can contact your local council’s private rented sector team or the Property Ombudsman.
Related UK Housing Guides
- UK Average Rent by Region
- National Insurance Calculator 2026/27
- Stamp Duty Calculator
- UK Mortgage Types Explained
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