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Browse 2,115 homes for sale in Bolton, Greater Manchester from local estate agents.
£250k
1,552
110
94
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Semi-Detached
367 listings
Avg £288,214
Detached
350 listings
Avg £532,747
Terraced
250 listings
Avg £173,351
Apartment
110 listings
Avg £141,785
End of Terrace
68 listings
Avg £176,292
Flat
57 listings
Avg £119,848
Detached Bungalow
39 listings
Avg £386,923
Semi-Detached Bungalow
36 listings
Avg £253,579
semi_detached
32 listings
Avg £282,516
Bungalow
30 listings
Avg £279,000
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
home.co.uk currently shows a broad Bolton market rather than a thin run of similar homes. Terraced properties make up 656 listings with an average asking price of £167,901, 894 semi-detached homes average £262,327, and 644 detached properties sit at £477,882. Flats come in lower, at an average of £125,965 across 313 listings. Taken together, that gives one area room for very different budgets and buying plans.
The busiest part of the market sits in the middle. home.co.uk lists 1,300 homes under £200k, 1,178 from £200k to £300k, and 786 more between £300k and £500k. By size, 3-bed homes lead with 1,532 listings at an average of £246,865, while 2-beds follow on 1,202 listings averaging £165,141. There are also 29 homes over £1m, so Bolton does still have a small upper-end slice.

Bolton still reads as a working town with its own pull, yet the borough stretches well beyond the centre. Busier streets near town give way to places such as Horwich, Harwood, Westhoughton and the western slopes towards the West Pennine Moors. That contrast matters at weekends. It also helps explain the housing mix, from terraces closer in to larger family houses on the outer patches.
For many buyers, Bolton comes down to a simple trade-off that works. Day-to-day shopping, parks and services are close at hand, and places like Smithills Country Park, Leverhulme Park, Hall i’ th’ Wood Museum and the Octagon Theatre add more than just basics. Our live figures show 516 rental listings and 100 rental agents too, so the lettings side is active. That combination is a big part of why people settle here without much fuss.

Schooling usually sits near the top of the list for families looking in Bolton. Names that come up again and again include Bolton School, Canon Slade School and Thornleigh Salesian College, and plenty of buyers widen the search across the borough to match state primary and secondary catchment needs. For post-16 study, Bolton College and the University of Bolton keep those next steps local. Before deciding, we would still check the latest Ofsted reports and admissions data, because catchments and available places can shift.
Often, the school decision follows the house rather than the other way round. Paying a bit more for the right catchment can make sense if it avoids a difficult daily drop-off or another move later. Bolton helps on that front, because the same school zone can include terraces, semis and detached homes. If education comes first, we would shortlist schools, then look hard at the nearby streets, the public transport options and the sort of housing around them.

As a Greater Manchester base, Bolton is fairly straightforward to use. Bolton station gives direct rail services into Manchester and other North West destinations, and the M61, M60 and A666 keep road journeys manageable across the region. Buses reach across the borough as well, so plenty of neighbourhoods work even when they are not near the station. That matters for buyers splitting the week between home and office.
Parking can make or break a move. Near the town centre, older terraces are often tight for on-street spaces, so it pays to check evening conditions and any resident permit rules before going ahead. Some suburban roads and newer estates give a bit more room, especially where a household runs more than one car. Cycling can work for shorter trips, but most buyers still see Bolton as somewhere car-friendly, with rail as useful back-up.

Before viewings get serious, speak to a broker and line up a mortgage agreement in principle. It shows a seller that you mean business, and it helps when you need to move quickly among 3,734 homes for sale.
Try not to look at Bolton as one uniform market. Central streets, areas that suit regular rail users, and quieter family locations all feel different, and a terrace near the station will appeal to a different buyer than a detached house nearer the borough edge.
Go back at more than one time of day. That is often the only way to judge parking, traffic levels and background noise properly. In Bolton, the contrast between older streets, suburban roads and newer estates can be sharper than a first viewing suggests.
Once a property looks right, book a survey before you commit. For many standard homes, a RICS Level 2 survey is the sensible starting point. Older houses, or places that have been altered, can call for a closer look.
Legal work tends to move better when the solicitor is in place early and your documents are ready. We would ask for title issues, leasehold details and any local restrictions to be checked from the outset, rather than later when they can slow everything down.
After the searches are back, the mortgage offer is issued and negotiations are agreed, the process moves on to exchange and then completion. That is the point where the keys become yours, and the move can be planned to an actual timetable instead of hopeful guesswork.
Condition matters in Bolton, not just postcode. Plenty of the stock is older, and terraced streets that look simple at first glance can hide issues with roof age, damp, altered chimney stacks or shared passageways that change the final bill. With flats, we would look closely at lease length, service charges and ground rent, because they can affect affordability long after completion. Newer homes are not exempt either, as some carry management fees for private roads, green areas or wider estate upkeep, so get the full breakdown before agreeing a price.
The setting around a property deserves the same care. Parts of Bolton lie near waterways, lower ground or former industrial land, so drainage, any subsidence history and flood risk should all be picked up during the survey and through the solicitor’s checks. Some streets also fall under conservation controls, which can affect windows, extensions, rooflights and other exterior changes. A quick read of the planning history and title paperwork can head off later problems, especially where loft works or rear extensions are already in place.
Small practical points are easy to miss on a first walk round. Parking, bin storage, garden size and rear access tend to matter much more once you are living there, especially on compact terraces and older semi-detached roads. A family may need extra room around school runs and storage, while an investor may care more about a layout that is easy to maintain and easy to let. In Bolton, the better buy is usually the house that matches both the street and the plan you have for the next few years.

Our current home.co.uk figures put Bolton’s average asking price at £267,237. There are 3,734 live listings behind that number, which gives enough depth to compare more than one property type and more than one budget band. Flats and terraces usually sit below that average, while larger detached houses pull it upwards. For buyers shopping to a fixed limit, the £200k to £300k range is where the market is busiest.
Bolton comes under Bolton Council, and properties can fall anywhere from council tax band A to H. Smaller terraces and many flats are often in the lower bands, while bigger semi-detached houses and detached homes may sit higher. The band is tied to the individual property rather than just the postcode. Check both the listing and the council record before making an offer.
Some school names come up repeatedly in Bolton searches, especially Bolton School, Canon Slade School and Thornleigh Salesian College. Bolton College and the University of Bolton strengthen the post-16 and higher education picture as well. The right fit will still depend on catchment, admissions rules and current Ofsted reports. We always advise checking those points before narrowing the search to one area.
Commuting is one of Bolton’s practical strengths. Rail, bus and road options cover most everyday routines, with Bolton station linking into Manchester and other North West destinations, and the M61 giving quick road access across the region. Local bus routes are helpful too, particularly near the town centre or along a main corridor. For a lot of buyers, that means a car can be optional rather than essential.
For investors, Bolton has scale. The market is active across several price points, and our live data shows 516 rental listings along with 100 rental agents. Two and three-bed properties matter most on both the rental side and the resale side, which helps later flexibility. Still, as with any purchase, the right street usually matters more than the postcode alone.
SDLT is set by the price paid, not by Bolton itself. In 2024-25, standard buyers pay 0% up to £250,000, then 5% from £250,000 to £925,000. Using Bolton’s average asking price of £267,237, a standard buyer would pay about £862 in SDLT, while a first-time buyer would usually pay nothing because the price is below the £425,000 relief limit. Near a threshold, even a small change in price can shift the bill quite a bit.
Among the mainstream choices, semi-detached homes are the largest group in our live data, with 894 listings at an average of £262,327. Terraced houses are not far behind in availability, with 656 listings averaging £167,901, so they remain a lower entry point for many buyers. Detached stock totals 644 homes, though the average price rises sharply to £477,882. That spread gives Bolton room for both entry-level moves and bigger step-ups.
Stamp duty needs planning for, but the current bands are clear enough. In 2024-25, standard buyers pay 0% up to £250,000, 5% from £250,000 to £925,000, 10% from £925,000 to £1.5 million, and 12% above that. First-time buyers pay 0% up to £425,000, then 5% from £425,000 to £625,000, with no relief above £625,000. On Bolton’s current average asking price of £267,237, a standard buyer would pay just over £861 in SDLT.
For many first-time buyers in Bolton, the tax side is one of the more reassuring parts of the sums. A large share of local homes sit below the £425,000 relief threshold, so a typical terrace, semi or even plenty of family houses may come with no stamp duty at all, depending on the agreed price. The maths changes faster once you step up to larger detached homes or premium plots, so run the figures before offering. We would also budget for legal fees, the survey, mortgage costs and moving expenses alongside the deposit, because those extras build quickly.
A realistic budget starts with the agreed price, then adds everything else around it. Conveyancing, mortgage arrangement fees and a RICS Level 2 survey should all be part of the plan, especially in a market as mixed as Bolton. There is some flexibility here, which helps. Stock runs across terraces, semis, flats and detached homes, so it is often possible to find something that fits both the monthly budget and the upfront costs.

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This calculator provides estimates for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. Estimates based on 4.5% interest rate, repayment mortgage. Actual rates depend on your circumstances.
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