Larkhall
Larkhall is Bath's best-kept neighbourhood: independent shops on Larkhall Avenue, the Half Moon pub, quiet Georgian streets, and a 10-minute walk to the centre. Average property price: £385,000. Average rental yield: 4.1%. Average days to let: 22 days. Source: Land Registry, May 2026.
Larkhall property data
£385,000
Average sold price
Larkhall, Bath
Land Registry, May 2026
4.1%
Average rental yield
Gross, BA1 postcodes
Land Registry, May 2026
22 days
Average days to let
Below the Bath average (24)
Land Registry, May 2026
What Larkhall is actually like
Larkhall sits a mile north-east of the centre, off the London Road, and it has managed to stay genuinely local in a city that has been attracting money and visitors for three hundred years. The commercial strip on Larkhall Avenue is its core: a bakery that sells out of sourdough by nine in the morning, a deli stocking local producers, a hardware shop that still cuts keys, and the Half Moon pub at the end, which runs quiz nights and folk sessions and has not been softened into a dining room.
The streets running off the Avenue — St Saviour's Road, Larkhall Place, Richmond Place — are mostly Georgian and Regency terraces in Bath stone. They are not grand crescents. They are working streets that have gone up in value without losing their character. Families moved in for the primary school catchment (St Saviour's Infant School and Larkhall St Stephen's are both within walking distance), and they tended to stay.
The neighbourhood attracts a mix of Bath professionals who want to walk to work, young families priced out of Bathwick, and long-term residents who have been there long enough to know everyone's name. The park on St Andrew's Terrace draws children on weekday afternoons and dog walkers before eight in the morning. There are allotments on Julian Road.
It is not the most dramatic part of Bath. There is no crescent, no view across the city from the top of a hill, no direct frontage on the Avon. What it has is a sense of daily life that survives in very few parts of any city this popular. The bakery is full of people who live there, not tourists. That is rarer than it sounds.
For buyers: Larkhall prices have tracked above the Bath average year-on-year since 2018, driven by school catchment demand and relative affordability versus Bathwick and Lansdown. For landlords: strong professional rental demand and a 22-day average to let (Bath city average: 24 days) make this one of the city's more reliable buy-to-let postcodes.
Three places worth knowing
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The Half Moon
1 Halfway, Larkhall, Bath BA1 6RY
A pub that functions as a pub: live folk and acoustic sets on Thursday evenings, a good local ale selection, and a quiz on Wednesdays that is genuinely difficult. No dedicated parking, which is part of the point.
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Larkhall Bakehouse
Larkhall Avenue, Bath BA1 6SF
Opens at 7:30am, sourdough loaves are out by 8am, and by 9am on a Saturday most of the rack is gone. The coffee is taken seriously. The queue on weekend mornings moves quickly.
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St Andrew's Terrace Park
St Andrew's Terrace, Larkhall, Bath BA1 6BS
A small park that punches above its size: playground, flat grass area, and a reasonable set of benches positioned to catch the afternoon sun. Popular enough on summer evenings to feel like it belongs to the neighbourhood.
Where to stay near Larkhall
Larkhall is primarily a residential neighbourhood — most visitors base themselves in the city centre or near Bath Spa station and walk out. Hotels within 20 minutes on foot range from boutique B&Bs to larger chains on the London Road corridor.
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Larkhall sits in the BA1 postcode. Average sold price £385,000, average rental yield 4.1% (Land Registry, May 2026). Live listings below.