Area Overview for Titsey
Area Information
Living in Titsey means residing in a quiet civil parish on the North Downs, almost wholly enclosed by the M25 London Orbital Motorway. The area covers eight square kilometres, creating a compact environment where residents find themselves surrounded by woodland, smallholdings, and agricultural land. Titsey is fundamentally a dispersed settlement with deep historical roots, first appearing in the Domesday Book as Ticesei. Today, the village functions as a rural enclave rather than a bustling town, defined by its connection to the Titsey Place estate and the historic parish church of St James the Greater. The population stands at 280 people, resulting in a very low density of just 35 people per square kilometre. This setting places you on the North Downs near the source of the River Eden and alongside the Roman road linking London to Lewes. While Titsey lacks a railway station, the presence of the historic Gresham and Leveson-Gower manor estate provides a sense of continuity with the region's past. You will find the village character remains unchanged by rapid modernisation, offering a lifestyle dictated more by nature and history than by urban convenience. The area contains the highest point of Botley Hill and serves as the south-western part of the Tatsfield and Titsey ward.
- Area Type
- Parish
- Area Size
- 8.0 km²
- Population
- Not available
- Population Density
- Not available
Demographics
The community within Titsey is shaped by its status as an older, established rural settlement. Your neighbours are predominantly over the age of 70, marking a median age that significantly exceeds national averages. This demographic profile reflects a place where families often move in retirement or where ownership is passed down through generations rather than acquired through new migration. Home ownership is exceptionally high in Titsey, with 84 per cent of households owning their properties outright or with a mortgage. This statistic indicates a substantial portion of the property stock consists of long-term owner-occupied homes rather than investment or rental properties. The text data does not specify breakdowns for household composition types or predominant ethnic groups, but the high ownership rate suggests stability within the local community. You can expect a neighbourhood where residents have deep ties to the land, particularly given the presence of charity-owned estate land. The population density of 35 people per square kilometre reinforces the sense of space and quiet that defines life here, contrasting sharply with denser urban wards in Surrey.
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NS-SEC
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Go to Demographics tabPlanning
Planning Constraints
- Flood RiskPremium
- Ramsar Wetland SitesPremium
- Area of Outstanding Natural BeautyPremium
- Protected Nature ReservePremium
- Protected WoodlandPremium
- Crime RiskPremium