A complete guide to property investment in Brightlingsea.
Last updated: 18 September 2025
Brightlingsea’s property market has a steady feel, with owner-occupation notably above average and a high proportion of private rentals compared to much of Britain. Properties tend to linger for a while before selling, with homes currently spending an average of 76 days on the market and a typical discount to asking price of £5,000 (the typical achieved discount). The market is dominated by older residents — those aged 60 and above make up a strikingly high share, while younger families and professionals are less common. Affordability is reasonable, with the price-to-income ratio at 6.0 and rent-to-income at 26.0%, both sitting comfortably in the middle of the pack.
Rental yields are modest, averaging 4.2%, though the top-performing postcode district achieves a slightly higher 4.6%. Capital values have changed by -2.0% over the last year, but looking over a three-year horizon, growth is a more encouraging 7.6%, with an annualised rate of 2.5%.
Median price per sq ft
£310 / sq ft
Average rental yield
4.2%
Capital growth (1y)
-2.0%
Sales in past year
141
* Property stats calculated for last full calendar year (2024).
Live prices in Brightlingsea, East of England
* Extreme prices clipped for legibility
Median price
£295,000
25% of properties below...
£245,000
75% of properties below...
£421,250
Most expensive property
£899,995
Live listings
148
Median days on market
76
Looking ahead, Brightlingsea’s property market seems likely to remain stable, with modest rental yields and affordable entry points. The three-year capital growth of 7.6% (annualised at 2.5%) gives some comfort that, despite short-term fluctuations, values have trended upward over a longer period.
The strong presence of older residents and single occupiers may keep demand for smaller properties and rentals steady, but limited population churn could mean slower sales activity and fewer opportunities for rapid appreciation. For investors focused on yield and steady, long-term returns, Brightlingsea offers a calm market with reasonable affordability and persistent rental demand. However, anyone hoping for a quick flip or a surge in capital values may need to look elsewhere for excitement.
Average yield (%)
* 2025 data for YTD
Median price per sq ft (£/sq ft)
* 2025 data for YTD
Investment properties in Brightlingsea, East of England
£250,000 - Guide Price
3 bedroom bungalow for sale
Maltings Road, Brightlingsea, Colch...
£390,000 - Offers in Excess of
5 bedroom detached house for sale
Sydney Street, Brightlingsea, Colch...
£294,000 - Offers in Excess of
3 bedroom bungalow for sale
Maltings Road, Brightlingsea, CO7
£170,000
2 bedroom semi-detached house for sale
John Street, Brightlingsea, CO7
£425,000 - Guide Price
3 bedroom detached bungalow for sale
Church Road, Brightlingsea
£325,000 - Offers in Excess of
3 bedroom apartment for sale
Anchor Inn, Brightlingsea, CO7
Buyers have some negotiation leverage, but not much.
• Median discount: £5,000
• 1 in 4 properties sell at > £10,000 below asking
• 1 in 10 properties sell at > £13,800 below asking
In percentage terms:
• Median discount of 2.1%
• 25% of properties discounted by > 3.8%
• 10% of properties discounted by > 5.0%
Top postcodes for rental yield and (annualised) capital growth
GeoGlider calculates property investment stats by blending official and proprietary datasets. Here's a quick overview of key sources and how we use them:
HM Land Registry: Property transaction and sold-price records for England & Wales used to calculate historical capital growth, price levels and comparables.
Office for National Statistics (ONS): Demographic and economic indicators for the UK, including Census 2021, supporting area profiling and market context.
Ordnance Survey: Authoritative UK geospatial data powering accurate boundaries, roads and terrain for mapping and spatial analysis.
GeoProp: Our proprietary AI pipeline that processes millions of property listings to extract rich features and live market signals.
Department for Levelling Up, Housing & Communities: Energy Performance Certificate (EPC) scores and property floor areas.
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC): Household income and employment data to understand local affordability and economic conditions.
Data is updated continuously, matched across sources and rigorously validated.