How Rare Are They and What Are They Worth?
For some homebuyers, the kitchen is the deal maker. For others, it is the number of bedrooms, the school catchment or the distance to the railway station. Yet for a sizeable group of buyers, the garden matters just as much as the house itself. Across Doncaster and its surrounding villages, there are 3,073 homes with large gardens.
What is a large garden? Homes sitting on plots of between 0.25 and 0.5 acres.
That is the equivalent of roughly one quarter to one half of a football pitch, depending on the dimensions used. It is enough room for proper lawns, mature trees, vegetable beds, sheds, greenhouses, children’s play areas and entertaining space, without necessarily becoming a full-time land management project.
Once plots move much beyond half an acre, buyers often begin to think about paddocks, grazing, smallholdings or simply the amount of time and money required to maintain the land. A quarter to half an acre can therefore represent something of a sweet spot for people who genuinely enjoy outdoor space.
Not everyone wants a large garden in Doncaster
It is important to say that large gardens are not right for everybody.
Plenty of Doncaster buyers actively prefer a smaller, easier to maintain outside space. A modest patio or compact lawn might be ideal for a busy professional, an older homeowner or somebody who would rather spend their weekends doing anything other than cutting grass.
Modern housebuilders understand that. Many newer homes have been built on smaller plots, allowing more properties to be constructed within the same development. This can help keep homes more affordable and reduce the amount of garden maintenance required. The trade-off, of course, is that some modern gardens can feel closer to a postage stamp.
For those who want space for children, dogs, gardening, entertaining or simply a little distance from the neighbours, a genuinely large garden remains highly desirable.
Where are Doncaster’s large garden homes?
The 3,073 homes are spread across the twelve main postcode districts covering Doncaster and many of its surrounding villages.
- DN1: 3 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £740,000)
- DN2: 28 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £253,370)
- DN3: 140 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £335,441)
- DN4: 535 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £503,533)
- DN5: 418 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £446,362)
- DN6: 239 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £405,249)
- DN7: 208 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £332,908)
- DN8: 112 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £256,990)
- DN9: 619 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £394,962)
- DN10: 399 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £484,830)
- DN11: 211 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £481,384)
- DN12: 161 homes with a large garden (with an average value of £279,559)
The average estimated value across all the postcode districts is approximately £409,549.
That figure should not be treated as a valuation for every home with a large garden. The size, condition, location and style of property will still have a considerable effect on its value. A detached house with a modern kitchen, open views and half an acre will naturally sit in a very different price bracket to a smaller semi-detached or terraced home with a long thin plot. Nevertheless, the figure gives us a useful indication of the value associated with this section of the local property market.
Large gardens are not limited to detached houses in Doncaster
One of the most interesting findings is that these plots are not found exclusively behind large, detached homes.
For example, in DN5 alone, there are 122 semi-detached homes sitting on plots between 0.25 and 0.5 acres and DN4 has 119 semi-detached homes within the same plot range (these are the postcodes with the highest number), while DN1 has 3 semi-detached homes and DN2 has 16 (these are the postcodes with the lowest number).
This challenges the assumption that a large garden automatically means buying a large country house. There are a handful of older terraced homes in Doncaster that were constructed with exceptionally long gardens, particularly in areas where land values and development pressures were very different from today.
How often do these Doncaster homes change hands?
Of Doncaster’s 3,073 homes with these large gardens, 1,639 have a recorded sale history since 1995.
That means approximately 53% have changed hands at least once during that period, while just under half have no recorded transaction in the last 30 years.
This helps demonstrate why finding the right large garden home can take patience. Many of these properties remain with the same owners for long periods. People who have the outdoor space they want are often reluctant to give it up, particularly when comparable homes are difficult to find.
At the time of writing this article, only 76 of the 3,073 homes were being marketed for sale (which represents only 2.5% of the total large garden housing stock across DN1-DN12) … not much is it?
Of course, these figures will move as homes come to the market and sales are agreed, but they illustrate the relative scarcity.
A garden is worth more than its size
A garden cannot be judged purely by acreage though.
Its shape, privacy, orientation, landscaping and usability all matter.
A beautifully designed 50ft by 20ft garden can be far more appealing than a larger plot that is steep, overlooked or difficult to maintain. Equally, some buyers see an established garden and immediately think about the work involved (although those robot mowers are very good!). Others see mature trees, vegetable beds and flower borders and fall in love with the garden before they have properly viewed the house.
That emotional response is one reason why Doncaster homes with exceptional gardens can attract strong interest when they are marketed and priced correctly. Doncaster and its surrounding villages have a varied mixture of homes, from modern developments to period properties and substantial village houses. For those buyers who dream of space to plant, play, entertain or simply breathe, the area’s 3,073 large garden homes represent an important, valuable and relatively scarce part of the local property market.