Average rent in Leeds is £750–£950 per month for a 1-bedroom property in 2026. Two-bedroom properties range from £1,300–£1,600/month, and 3-bedroom homes from £1,650–£2,100/month. Leeds has seen significant rent growth driven by strong employment and student demand. Chapeltown, Meanwood, and Morley are among the more affordable areas.
Average Rent in Leeds by Property Size (2026)
| Property size | Monthly rent range | Mid-point estimate |
|---|---|---|
| 1-bedroom flat | £750 – £950 | £850 |
| 2-bedroom flat | £1,300 – £1,600 | £1,450 |
| 2-bedroom house | £1,400 – £1,750 | £1,575 |
| 3-bedroom house | £1,550 – £2,100 | £1,850 |
| 4-bedroom house | £1,900 – £2,700 | £2,300 |
Source: Valuation Office Agency Private Rental Market Statistics and HomeLet Rental Index, 2025–2026 data.
Year-on-Year Rent Change in Leeds
| Year | 1-bed average | Annual change |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | £697 | +8.4% |
| 2023 | £765 | +9.9% |
| 2024 | £816 | +6.1% |
| 2025–26 | £850 | +4.2% |
Rent growth has slowed from its 2022–2023 peak, but Leeds rents remain significantly higher than pre-pandemic levels. The ONS Index of Private Housing Rental Prices shows cumulative rental inflation of approximately 30–40% since 2020 in most major UK cities.
Worked Example — Renting a 1-Bed in Leeds
A graduate earning the Leeds average salary of ££31,000 takes home approximately ££1,937 per month after tax and National Insurance. Renting a 1-bed flat at £850/month uses 44% of their take-home pay. A 2-bed shared with a partner at £1,450/month total means each pays £725 — 37% of take-home each, above the standard 35% affordability guideline.
What Can You Rent in Leeds for Different Budgets?
| Monthly budget | What you can typically find in Leeds |
|---|---|
| Under £700 | Studio or room in shared house in outer areas |
| £700–£900 | 1-bed in outer/suburban areas; room in professional house share central |
| £900–£1,200 | 1-bed flat in mid-range areas; 2-bed shared house |
| £1,200–£1,600 | 1-bed flat in desirable areas; 2-bed flat in outer zones |
| £1,600–£2,200 | 2-bed flat in popular areas; 3-bed house |
| £2,200+ | Premium central flat; 3–4 bed family home |
Rent vs Leeds Average Salary
Average salary in Leeds: approximately ££31,000/year (££1,937/month take-home)
| Scenario | Monthly rent | % of take-home | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-bed alone | £850 | 44% | ⚠️ Stretched |
| 2-bed, split 2 ways | £725 | 37% | ✅ Manageable |
| 3-bed, split 3 ways | £616 | 32% | ✅ Most affordable option |
Renting Rights in Leeds
Wherever you rent in England or Scotland, your rights as a tenant include:
- A written tenancy agreement (if you ask for one)
- Protection from illegal eviction
- Deposit protection in a government-approved scheme
- Right to a safe and habitable property (fitness for human habitation)
- Notice period before eviction (minimum 2 months for landlords in most cases)
Scotland has additional tenant protections under the Private Residential Tenancy Agreement introduced in 2017.
Total Monthly Costs Beyond Rent in Leeds
Rent is only part of the monthly cost. Budget for these additional expenses:
| Cost | Monthly estimate (Leeds) |
|---|---|
| Council Tax (Band B–C, single occupier 25% discount) | £90–£140 |
| Gas and electricity (average 1-bed) | £80–£120 |
| Water rates | £30–£45 |
| Broadband | £25–£45 |
| Contents insurance | £10–£20 |
| Total bills on top of rent | ~£235–£370/month |
For a 1-bed flat at £875/month, total monthly housing costs including bills are approximately £1110–£1245/month.
Upfront costs to budget for:
- Deposit (typically 5 weeks’ rent): ~£1093
- First month’s rent in advance: £875
- Optional referencing fees: £0 (banned for tenants in England since 2019 Tenant Fees Act)
- Removal/van hire: £100–£400
Tenant fees (referencing, admin, tenancy setup) are banned for private tenants in England and Wales. Landlords in Scotland cannot charge tenancy setup fees either. If any letting agent asks for upfront fees beyond the deposit and first month’s rent, this is unlawful.
For more, see average rent by city UK, cost of living in Leeds, and renting vs buying a home UK.