£200,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Heavygate Road, S10 1QA
£200,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Heavygate Road, S10 1QA
Saxton Mee
-8d ago
Compare local agents for a Sheffield home, using sold-price evidence and local market analysis








Sheffield sellers are working in a market where the average sold price is £221,000 and prices have risen by 6.7% over the last 12 months. That movement matters. A good valuation in Crookes, Walkley, Ecclesall, Heeley or Kelham Island needs more than a broad city average, because Sheffield changes sharply from one hillside street to the next. We help you compare estate agents on local evidence, pricing approach, contract terms and the way they plan to market your specific home.
Sheffield’s housing stock has a strong terrace base, with Victorian and Edwardian terraces making up around 40% of homes. Many are built from red brick, local sandstone, slate or stone roofing, with areas such as Nether Edge, Broomhill and Crookes carrying older construction patterns that affect pricing and buyer expectations. The city also has 38 conservation areas and around 1,200 listed buildings, so presentation and valuation need care. A flat in Kelham Island, a terrace in Walkley and a detached house in Dore should not be priced from the same script.

£221,000
Average Sold Price
+6.7%
12-Month Price Change
40%
Victorian and Edwardian Terraces
556,500
Population
232,000
Households
38
Conservation Areas
1,200
Listed Buildings
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Sheffield’s average sold price of £221,000 gives sellers a useful starting point, but the city’s real market is more layered. homedata.co.uk sold-price records show a 6.7% annual rise, which gives pricing some support after a difficult national period. Local value is still street-led. A house near Ecclesall Road South, a terrace in Heeley and a converted flat around Kelham Island can sit in very different buyer pools despite sharing the Sheffield name.
The 40% share of Victorian and Edwardian terraces shapes how agents should price much of the city. In Walkley, Crookes and Nether Edge, buyers often scrutinise roof condition, damp, cellars, retaining walls and signs of movement before making a firm offer. Older terraces can sell strongly when priced with their condition honestly reflected. Overpricing a house with visible damp or ageing stonework can waste the first few weeks of marketing.
Sheffield’s 6.7% price increase should not be used as a blanket uplift for every home. Hillside plots, former coal working areas, conservation-area rules and flood exposure around the Don Valley all affect how buyers assess risk. A strong local agent will separate recent comparable sales by housing type, construction age and micro-location. That matters more than a single headline percentage.
Terraced housing is central to the Sheffield market, especially in areas such as Crookes, Walkley, Heeley and Nether Edge. Many homes date from the Victorian and Edwardian periods, with solid walls, shallow foundations, older roof coverings and later alterations. Those details can affect the buyer’s mortgage, survey and negotiation behaviour. An agent who understands Sheffield terraces should build those points into the asking price from the start.
Semi-detached and detached homes often sit in a different part of the market, particularly around Dore, Fulwood, Ranmoor and Ecclesall. Buyers in these areas may focus on plot shape, extensions, parking, school routes and the condition of roofs or drainage on sloping ground. Larger homes can take more careful launch planning, especially where the asking price sits above the city average of £221,000. Photography, floorplans and measured room flow need to justify the price.
Flats form a more specific market around the City Centre, Kelham Island, Broomhall and student-related locations. Buyers may compare service charges, lease terms, cladding position, parking and rental potential before looking at décor. Former industrial conversions around Kelham Island and Neepsend can also raise questions about construction, noise and future repair costs. A suitable agent should know how to answer those questions before the first viewing.
Based on 2,057 live listings with an average asking price of £266,958.
Source: home.co.uk
See which agents are selling fastest and at the best prices in Sheffield.
Compare Estate Agents FreeSheffield’s sale market is built around established housing rather than one single new-build story. Terraces make up around 40% of the housing stock, and many are concentrated in older inner and western districts such as Walkley, Crookes, Nether Edge and Heeley. Those homes often need agents who can discuss stonework, roof age, cellars and damp without alarming buyers. Good selling advice is practical, not glossy.
Newer apartments and conversions are more visible around the City Centre, Kelham Island and Neepsend, where the market can behave differently from family house streets in Fulwood or Dore. Lease details, service charges and building management can influence buyer decisions as much as room size. Some buyers will pay for location and finish, while others discount heavily for uncertainty. Your agent should know which questions will arrive before the viewing diary fills.
Student demand also affects parts of Sheffield because the city has a large 20-24 age group. Broomhall, City Centre edges and areas near established student housing streets can attract investor interest, but that does not mean every property should be marketed as a rental. Some homes need owner-occupier presentation to achieve the right result. The best route depends on the property, not the postcode alone.

Sheffield had a 2021 population of 556,500 in 232,000 households, with a 2024 estimate of 582,493. Population density stood at 1,512.5 people per km² in 2021, but the feel of the city changes sharply between the Don Valley, City Centre, Dore, Crookes and Nether Edge. The housing market follows that geography. Sellers need agents who understand how buyers compare hillside streets, terraces, flats and suburban houses.
The city is set on the eastern foothills of the Pennines and is known for its seven hills. That topography affects more than the view from a bedroom window. Sloping plots can bring retaining walls, split-level foundations, drainage pressure and access issues. In Walkley, Crookes and Heeley, buyers often look closely at garden gradients and signs of movement before committing.
Conservation areas also shape buyer behaviour in Sheffield. The city has 38 conservation areas, including Abbeydale Road South, Broomhill, Broomhall, City Centre, Crookes, Dore, Ecclesall, Endcliffe, Fulwood, Kelham Island, Nether Edge and Ranmoor. Around 1,200 listed buildings add another layer of regulation and buyer caution. A capable agent will explain the benefit of historic setting without ignoring maintenance responsibilities.
Sheffield sits on Carboniferous rocks formed around 320 million years ago, including Millstone Grit, limestone and Coal Measures. Steep-sided valleys expose sandstone, mudstone, seatearth and coal, which helps explain the city’s varied building materials and ground conditions. Many older buildings use local sandstone, red brick, timber frames, slate or stone roofing. That local construction pattern should feed directly into valuation and viewing preparation.
Former coal workings are a major local consideration, especially towards the east and south of Sheffield. Ground movement can still occur decades after mining ended, and buyers may ask about subsidence, mine entries or historic claims. Cracking, uneven floors and sticking doors need careful handling before the property is launched. A good agent will not try to dismiss buyer concerns, but will help you prepare sensible answers.
Sheffield was not glaciated during the last glacial episode, but periglacial processes left slope deposits known as Head across lower scarp and dip slopes. That sounds technical, yet it matters for buildings on gradients or made ground. Retaining-wall movement and shallow historic foundations are recurring survey themes in local housing. Sellers in Crookes, Walkley, Heeley and hillside parts of Ecclesall should take those risks seriously before setting an asking price.
Flood risk is not evenly spread across Sheffield, but it is significant enough to affect buyer confidence. The 2023 Strategic Flood Risk Assessment identifies surface water flooding as the larger local issue, with 11.56% of properties at risk. That includes 5,589 properties at high risk, 6,236 at medium risk and 24,527 at low risk. Sellers near lower-lying routes and valley settings should expect questions.
River and sea flooding affects 6.36% of Sheffield properties, with the Don Valley carrying particular history. The 2007 Don Valley floods damaged over 1,200 homes and remain part of local buyer memory. River-related risk includes 3,010 properties at high risk, 1,778 at medium risk, 10,430 at low risk and 4,770 at very low risk. Good agents know that flood information needs calm explanation, not silence.
Conservation-area status can also influence how a property is marketed. Abbeydale Road South, Broomhill, Dore, Ecclesall, Fulwood, Kelham Island and Nether Edge all contain streets where appearance, materials and alteration history can matter. Buyers may ask about windows, extensions, roofing materials or past works. A prepared seller can move faster once an offer is agreed.
Online, high-street and hybrid agents can all work in Sheffield, but the right choice depends on the property and the level of support you want. A straightforward modern flat in the City Centre may suit a different fee model from a listed house in Nether Edge or a hillside terrace in Walkley. Local knowledge can matter where survey issues, conservation rules or flood questions are likely. Cheaper is not always cheaper if the price is missed.
High-street agents often charge around 1-3% + VAT, with many sellers seeing fees around 1.5% + VAT. Sole agency agreements commonly run for 8-16 weeks, so contract length deserves close reading. Online agents may charge a fixed fee of around £999-£1,999, sometimes payable upfront. That can suit confident sellers, but you need to understand who will handle viewings, negotiation and sales progression.
Hybrid agents sit between those models, often combining a fixed fee with optional services. This can work where a property is easy to value and the seller is comfortable taking part in the process. Sheffield homes with older construction, mining legacy, flood exposure or complex lease details may need more hands-on advice. Always compare what is included before comparing the headline fee.

Ask 2-3 agents to value your Sheffield property and explain their evidence. A strong valuation should refer to comparable homes in places such as Crookes, Dore, Heeley, Kelham Island or Nether Edge, not just the city average of £221,000.
Ask how they would handle Sheffield-specific issues such as former coal workings, hillside plots, conservation areas and surface water risk. Their answer should be clear and practical, especially if your home is older or close to the Don Valley.
Check the fee, VAT position, sole agency period and withdrawal terms. High-street fees often sit around 1-3% + VAT, while online fees are usually fixed at around £999-£1,999.
Ask what price they would launch at, what range they expect offers to fall within and when they would review performance. A 6.7% annual rise supports confidence, but it should not be used as a blanket uplift for every Sheffield street.
Look at photography, floorplans, wording and how they will present issues such as cellars, sloping gardens, lease terms or conservation-area status. Sheffield buyers often ask detailed questions, so the marketing should reduce friction.
Find out who follows the sale after offer acceptance. Older terraces, flats and listed buildings can trigger survey or legal queries, so active progression can protect the chain and limit late renegotiation.
Do not accept a valuation just because it is the highest. Ask each agent to show the Sheffield sales they used, then test how they adjusted for condition, location, conservation status and construction. A terrace in Walkley with damp and retaining-wall concerns should not be priced in the same way as a renovated house on a stronger street in Crookes.
The first 14 days of marketing can set the tone for a Sheffield sale. If a home is priced too high, buyers may wait for a reduction, especially where surveys are likely to raise questions about damp, cracking or roof age. A realistic launch price can create better viewing momentum. That matters for older terraces around Heeley, Walkley, Crookes and Nether Edge.
Preparation can also protect your final price. Sellers should gather guarantees, planning papers, building regulation certificates, lease information and any flood or mining-related documents before launch. A listed or conservation-area property in Broomhill, Dore, Fulwood or Ranmoor may need extra explanation. Buyers move faster when answers are ready.
Fee negotiation should be linked to service level, not just a lower percentage. Ask what the agent will do for photography, floorplans, accompanied viewings, sales progression and post-survey negotiation. Sheffield’s housing mix creates many points where a buyer might try to reduce their offer. Your agent’s job is to defend the price with evidence.

Estate agency contracts can look simple, but the details affect your flexibility. Sheffield sellers should read the sole agency period, notice requirement, VAT wording and any extra marketing costs before signing. A tie-in of 8-16 weeks is common, though the exact period should match the property type and pricing confidence. Longer tie-ins may not suit a home where the valuation feels ambitious.
Marketing needs to reflect the buyer likely to view your home. A Kelham Island flat may need lease and service charge clarity, while a Crookes terrace may need careful wording around cellars, roof condition and outside space. A Dore detached home may need more emphasis on plot, layout and setting. One template will not do enough across Sheffield’s range.
Negotiation often starts before an offer is made. Buyers may use mining risk, flood maps, conservation rules or survey findings to push down the price. Your agent should be ready with comparable sales, repair context and a calm explanation of Sheffield’s construction patterns. That can be the difference between a small adjustment and a broken chain.
Most traditional estate agents in England charge 1-3% + VAT, with many sellers paying around 1.5% + VAT. On a Sheffield property selling at the average price of £221,000, even a small fee difference changes the final cost. A fixed online fee of £999-£1,999 can look attractive, but only if the service matches what your sale needs. Older homes often need more support after the survey stage.
Commission can give an agent an incentive to push for a stronger price, but that only works if the valuation is realistic. A high asking price in Nether Edge, Walkley or Heeley may generate viewings at first, then weaken if buyers spot repair issues. Fixed-fee models can work for simpler sales, especially where the seller is comfortable managing viewings and follow-up. Each model carries trade-offs.
Before instructing an agent, ask what happens if the sale falls through. Sheffield chains involving older terraces, flats or listed properties can face survey and legal delays. Find out whether the fee is payable only on completion and whether there are charges for withdrawal or marketing. Clear answers now reduce arguments later.

2,057 properties currently listed across Sheffield. Here are the most recently added.
£200,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Heavygate Road, S10 1QA
£200,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Heavygate Road, S10 1QA
Saxton Mee
-8d ago
£260,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Duncan Road, S10 1SN
£260,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Duncan Road, S10 1SN
Saxton Mee
-8d ago
£1,250,000
Detached, 5 bed
Cavendish Road, S11 9BH
£1,250,000
Detached, 5 bed
Cavendish Road, S11 9BH
Spencer the Estate Agent
-8d ago
£625,000
Semi-Detached, 4 bed
Endcliffe Vale Road, S10 3ET
£625,000
Semi-Detached, 4 bed
Endcliffe Vale Road, S10 3ET
Spencer the Estate Agent
-8d ago
£535,000
Duplex, 3 bed
S3 8FT
£535,000
Duplex, 3 bed
S3 8FT
Redbrik
-8d ago
£135,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Penistone Road North, S6 1QA
£135,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Penistone Road North, S6 1QA
Saxton Mee
-8d ago
£850,000
Detached, 5 bed
S7 1SJ
£850,000
Detached, 5 bed
S7 1SJ
Eadon Lockwood & Riddle
-8d ago
£145,000
Flat, 2 bed
Middlewood Drive East, S6 1RW
£145,000
Flat, 2 bed
Middlewood Drive East, S6 1RW
Auction House
-8d ago
£300,000
Detached, 3 bed
Kirkstead Gardens, S13 9XG
£300,000
Detached, 3 bed
Kirkstead Gardens, S13 9XG
Bell & Co Estates
-8d ago
£275,000
Town House, 2 bed
Makers Place, S3 8FS
£275,000
Town House, 2 bed
Makers Place, S3 8FS
Haus
-8d ago
£290,000
Semi-Detached, 3 bed
Warminster Crescent, S8 9NW
£290,000
Semi-Detached, 3 bed
Warminster Crescent, S8 9NW
Haus
-8d ago
£250,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Overton Road, S6 1WH
£250,000
Terraced, 3 bed
Overton Road, S6 1WH
Reeds Rains
-8d ago
Get free, no-obligation valuations from the top-performing local agents. Compare fees, services, and track records before you decide.
Compare Agents FreeStart with 2-3 free valuations and ask each agent to explain the Sheffield sales behind their figure. Good agents should understand terraces in Walkley and Crookes, flats around Kelham Island and larger houses in Dore or Fulwood. Compare fees, contract length, marketing quality and who will handle negotiation after the survey. Pick the agent whose pricing is evidenced, not simply the one who gives the highest number.
Yes. homedata.co.uk sold-price records show Sheffield’s average sold price at £221,000, with a 6.7% annual increase. That is a helpful backdrop for sellers, but the uplift should not be applied equally to every street. Condition, construction, flood exposure and local buyer demand still shape the final price.
Sheffield is a large South Yorkshire city with 556,500 residents recorded in 2021 and a 2024 estimate of 582,493. Housing ranges from Victorian and Edwardian terraces in Crookes, Walkley and Heeley to larger homes in Dore, Fulwood and Ranmoor. The city’s seven hills, Don Valley setting, conservation areas and student population all influence local property demand. Buyers tend to compare both location and building condition carefully.
Many high-street estate agents charge around 1-3% + VAT, with typical sole agency fees often close to 1.5% + VAT. Online agents often charge fixed fees of around £999-£1,999. The cheapest option is not always the best route for older Sheffield homes with survey risks or conservation-area issues. Ask what is included before judging the fee.
Online agents can work for straightforward homes where the seller is comfortable managing parts of the process. High-street agents may be better for older terraces, listed buildings, hillside homes or properties near flood-risk areas such as parts of the Don Valley. Hybrid agents can suit sellers wanting some support without a full commission model. The right choice depends on your property and how much help you need.
Sole agency contracts often run for 8-16 weeks. In Sheffield, the right term depends on price level, property type and how confident you are in the launch strategy. A terrace in Heeley may need a different review point from a larger house in Dore or a flat in the City Centre. Always check notice periods and withdrawal charges before signing.
Sheffield has many older terraces, hillside plots and homes built with local sandstone or red brick. Surveys may raise damp, roof, retaining-wall, foundation, wall-tie or movement questions. Former coal workings in parts of Sheffield can also lead buyers to ask for more checks. A good estate agent should help manage those conversations without letting the sale drift.
It can. The 2023 Sheffield Strategic Flood Risk Assessment records 11.56% of properties at risk from surface water flooding and 6.36% at risk from river and sea flooding. The 2007 Don Valley floods still influence buyer awareness in some locations. Sellers should be ready with clear information where flood risk may be raised.
Gather title documents, guarantees, planning permissions, building regulation certificates and any lease information before the property goes live. For conservation-area homes in Broomhill, Dore, Nether Edge or Kelham Island, paperwork for alterations can be especially useful. If your property has had mining, flood or structural checks, keep those reports ready. Prepared sellers often reduce delays after an offer is accepted.
Ask each agent to explain their comparable sales and how they adjusted for your property’s condition. A Sheffield home with a cellar, sloping garden, older roof or visible cracking needs a different valuation approach from a recently updated modern flat. Watch out for valuations that rely only on the city average of £221,000. Evidence should be local and specific.
From £400
A practical condition survey for conventional Sheffield homes in reasonable condition
From £550
Detailed reporting for older terraces, listed homes, hillside plots and larger Sheffield properties
From £69
Energy performance certificate needed before marketing most homes for sale
From £250
RICS valuation for Help to Buy repayment or staircasing requirements
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Compare local agents for a Sheffield home, using sold-price evidence and local market analysis
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