Buckinghamshire · Commuter belt
Milton Keynes sits in the comfortable middle — enough going on without the weekend chaos.
Day to day, Milton Keynes gives you a halal butcher, a Lidl or Aldi, a big supermarket (Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda or Morrisons), gyms, barbers, beauticians, a street market, a mosque, churches, a big park and a pool or leisure centre.
Based on its profile, Milton Keynes tends to work best for first-time buyers watching every pound.
| Question | Rough answer |
|---|---|
| Buying (average) | £320k — 42% below the London average of £553k |
| Renting a 2-bed | ≈ £1250 per month |
| Indicative household income to buy | ≈ £65k (10% deposit, 4.5× lending) |
It depends what you need: Milton Keynes scores 6/10 for safety, 7/10 for schools and 8/10 for transport. It tends to suit first-time buyers watching every pound.
Around £320k on average to buy (42% below the London average) and roughly £1250 a month to rent a two-bed. As a rule of thumb, buying at that price typically needs a household income around £65k with a 10% deposit.
The fastest trains take about 33 minutes to a central London terminal; door-to-door, allow around 41–56 minutes depending on where you work.