Brent · London
Wembley sits in the comfortable middle — enough going on without the weekend chaos. It's also one of the most diverse places in the dataset, and daily life (food, shops, faith spaces) reflects it.
Day to day, Wembley 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 temple or gurdwara, a big park and a pool or leisure centre.
Based on its profile, Wembley tends to work best for anyone who wants genuinely multicultural everyday life.
| Question | Rough answer |
|---|---|
| Buying (average) | £470k — 15% below the London average of £553k |
| Renting a 2-bed | ≈ £1650 per month |
| Indicative household income to buy | ≈ £95k (10% deposit, 4.5× lending) |
It depends what you need: Wembley scores 6/10 for safety, 7/10 for schools and 8/10 for transport. It tends to suit anyone who wants genuinely multicultural everyday life.
Around £470k on average to buy (15% below the London average) and roughly £1650 a month to rent a two-bed. As a rule of thumb, buying at that price typically needs a household income around £95k with a 10% deposit.
Wembley scores 8/10 for transport; a typical door-to-door journey to central London is roughly 46 minutes.