The best places to live in the UK for 2025 have been named by The Sunday Times, with a historic market town just 15 miles south of Cambridge taking the top spot.

Saffron Walden has been crowned the best place to live, thanks to its bustling high street, great schools, rich history and brilliant food scene.

The quaint market town, which has been trading since 1141, gets its name from the fact saffron was grown in the area during the 16th and 17th centuries – thanks to its favourable soil and climate.

Located 43 miles north of London, Saffron Walden has a population of around 16,000 and the average house price currently sits at £607,100.

Local resident India Burrett, 36, a trainee psychotherapist described the town as like “being in the south of France” during the summer “with everyone milling around". While her husband, Sam, hailed the area as having a “really great vibe.”

The guide says, while the town previously had a reputation for being old-fashioned and stuffy, it's now enjoying a new lease of life with fresh ideas, new eateries, and independent shops – including a food scene that is "defying the Essex stereotypes one aperitif and gordal olive at a time."

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Saffron Walden placed top of the list of 72 UK spots, which range from the Hebridean island of Tiree to vibrant cities like Sheffield and Bristol.

To compile the guide the team travelled the length and breadth of the UK, taking a whole host of factors into account – including schools, transport and broadband speeds, as well as access to green spaces, quality of the high street, and an area’s cultural offering.

There are some returning favourites to this year’s list, including Knutsford in Cheshire, Sevenoaks in Kent, and Market Harborough in Leicestershire.

However, the 2025 rankings also sees more new entries than ever, including surprising ones like Wembley in north London and the remote Welsh village of Maenclochog in Pembrokeshire.

What’s more, a few previous winners didn’t make the list – including Winchester in Hampshire and Altrincham in Cheshire. Read on for the full guide below...

Best places to live in the UK 2025

  • Saffron Walden, Essex - £607,100 (average house price)
  • Aberfeldy, Perth and Kinross - £343,100
  • Amersham, Buckinghamshire - £830,300
  • Ashburton, Devon - £373,600
  • Berkhamsted, Hertfordshire - £751,700
  • Harborne, Birmingham - £400,400
  • Bloomsbury, WC1, London - £650,100
  • Hotwells and Clifton Wood, Bristol - £527,800
  • Broughton, Hampshire - £758,100
  • Rhiwbina, Cardiff - £369,500
  • Chelmsford, Essex - £468,400 (regional winner, East of England)
  • Chew Valley, Somerset - £512,500 (regional winner, Southwest of England)
  • Chipping Campden, Gloucestershire - £570,500
  • Crickhowell, Powys - £525,500
  • Cullen, Moray - £174,200
  • Dundrum, County Down - £222,300 (regional winner, Northern Ireland)
  • Easingwold, North Yorkshire - £448,900
  • East Dulwich, SE22, London - £817,800
  • East Neuk, Fife - £299,200
  • Eccleshall, Staffordshire - £400,000
  • Stockbridge, Edinburgh - £407,200
  • Farnham, Surrey - £703,400
  • Strathbungo, Glasgow - £248,600
  • Gower Peninsula, Swansea - £310,200 (regional winner, Wales)
  • Hebden Bridge, West Yorkshire - £292,600
  • Holywood, County Down - £442,200
  • Hove, East Sussex - £524,400
  • Ilkley, West Yorkshire - £532,000 (regional winner, North and northeast of England)
  • Ilmington, Warwickshire - £458,100 (regional winner, Midlands)
  • Isle of Tiree, Inner Hebrides - £306,100
  • Kirkby Lonsdale, Cumbria - £663,500
  • Knutsford, Cheshire - £555,800
  • Horsforth, Leeds - £364,500
  • Woolton, Liverpool 0 £281,800 (regional winner, Northwest of England)
  • Maenclochog, Pembrokeshire - £255,000
  • Malmesbury, Wiltshire - £490,000
  • Malpas, Cheshire - £450,000
  • Market Harborough, Leicestershire - £407,600
  • Marlow, Buckinghamshire - £772,000
  • Milngavie, East Dunbartonshire - £321,300
  • Morpeth, Northumberland - £302,700
  • Mossley, Greater manchester - £255,000
  • North Berwick, East Lothian - £523,500 (regional winner, Scotland)
  • Norwich, Norfolk - £324,700
  • Oakham, Rutland - £420,500
  • Parbold, Lancashire - £331,600
  • Penarth, Vale of Glamorgan - £451,800
  • Penryn, Cornwall - £329,500
  • Petersfield, Hampshire - £605,100 (regional winner, Southeast of England)
  • Portstewart, County Londonderry - £297,600
  • Presteigne, Powys - £317,400
  • Reading, Berkshire - £484,700
  • Reepham, Norfolk - £358,800
  • Ripon, North Yorkshire - £350,300
  • Sevenoaks, Kent - £771,900
  • Sheffield - £264,500
  • Sherborne, Dorset - £422,200
  • Shrewsbury, Shropshire - £322,000
  • Southbourne, Dorset - £516,000
  • Stoke Newington, N16, London - £722,100
  • Telegraph Hill, SE14, London - £552,500
  • Thame, Oxfordshire - £496,900
  • The Heatons, Greater Manchester - £408,900
  • The Shelfords, Cambridgeshire - £511,300
  • Twickenham, TW1, London - £770,200
  • Tynemouth, Tyne and Wear - £305,700
  • Vale of Clwyd, Denbighshire - £331,400
  • Walthamstowe, E17, London - £532,800 (regional winner, London)
  • Wembley, HA9, London - £474,400
  • Wirksworth, Derbyshire - £385,300
  • Wivenhoe, Essex - £477,800
  • Woodbridge, Suffolk - £455,300
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Lizzie Thomson
Daily Editor, Country Living

Lizzie is the Daily Editor at Country Living, where you’ll find her writing about unique property market finds and dreamy UK staycation spots. Her specialisms include interiors, property, wildlife, travel, slow living and more. Previously, she’s written for Metro, Evening Standard, Ideal Home, Woman & Home and various other home and lifestyle titles. Lizzie studied English Literature at University of Liverpool, where she also was a writer and editor for her uni paper.