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Browse 5 rental homes to rent in Bolton, Greater Manchester from local letting agents.
One bed apartments provide a separate bedroom alongside distinct living space, bathroom, and kitchen areas. Properties in Bolton are available in various building types including mansion blocks, contemporary developments, and house conversions.
£725/m
8
0
102
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 8 results for 1 Bedroom Flats to rent in Bolton, Greater Manchester. The median asking price is £725/month.
Source: home.co.uk
Flat
8 listings
Avg £722
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Across Bolton, our live rental feed on home.co.uk currently shows 516 available homes, a solid amount of choice for a Greater Manchester town of this size. Openrent is the busiest agent at the moment with 31 active rentals and an average asking rent of £875, followed by Harrisons Estate Agents with 30 at £994. Prime & Management is marketing 28 homes at £1,173 on average, Entwistle Green has 22 at £937, and Regency Estates has 20 at £1,012. Put together, that points to a market that covers lower-budget lets as well as homes with more space or a higher spec.
Rents stretch across a wide range, so we usually suggest fixing the budget first and only then narrowing the shortlist. Homes near the station, the centre, or established school routes often get snapped up faster, while quieter suburban roads can leave a little more room on space and parking. Bolton also has enough competing agents to keep listings turning over, which helps when time is tight. When we compare one part of town with another, the live spread of asking rents often tells us more than one headline average ever could.

Bolton feels like a complete town, not just one suburb with a station. That matters. You can stay near the centre and still get out towards greener ground without much effort, and places such as Heaton, Lostock, Harwood, Horwich, Egerton and Bromley Cross each come with their own rhythm. The town centre pulls together shops, cafés, markets and everyday services, while Middlebrook gives the west side a strong retail and leisure draw. So the search can be shaped around the commute, the school run, or simply a quieter spot, all without leaving the borough boundary.
For renters who want room, convenience and decent value in one postcode search, Bolton often stacks up well. Smithills Country Park sits alongside Leverhulme Park, Queen’s Park and the wider West Pennine edge, so the outdoor side of the town is hard to miss. Then there is the Octagon Theatre, Bolton Museum, the market and the Bolton Wanderers link, which give the place some texture. From what we see, people often stay because Bolton feels used and real, with proper day-to-day links, rather than somewhere built only around commuting.

Most family searches start with schools. Around Bolton, names that come up again and again include Bolton School, Canon Slade School, Smithills School, Turton School and Harper Green School. Bolton College and the University of Bolton also matter for older students and adult learners. In practice, the route there can count just as much as the name on the prospectus, because a short daily trip often matters more than a small difference in distance on a map. Where school access is a key point, we would ask the agent which streets work best before booking the viewing.
For older teenagers and sixth form students, Bolton College can be a strong option because of its vocational routes. Families moving into the borough may also need to weigh up links into the rest of Greater Manchester. Catchment rules do move from year to year, so a house that looks right on paper still needs checking against the current admissions criteria. Near the more in-demand schools, rentals can go quickly, especially with a garden, off-street parking or a second reception room for homework and home working. Better to get the rental budget agreement in principle lined up early, then spend viewing time on homes that genuinely suit the school run.

At the centre of Bolton’s travel network, Bolton Interchange and Bolton station make a noticeable difference to daily renting decisions. Direct rail services keep Manchester, Preston and other nearby centres within straightforward reach, and bus routes run through the suburbs, the town centre and outlying neighbourhoods across the day. That setup suits hybrid working, city commutes and households that do not want to drive every morning. In many cases, being near the station saves hours over the course of a week.
Road travel is straightforward as well. The M61 is the key motorway route, and the A666 helps people move through Bolton and out towards nearby districts. Central terraces and busier roads can be tighter for parking, so off-road space is worth having if the car is staying. Cycling has improved across the borough too, and some of the quieter suburban roads make local trips easier than people expect from a town of this scale. Rail, bus, road, it gives renters options rather than one fixed pattern.

Before we book a viewing, it is worth weighing central streets against suburban family areas and the quieter edges of Bolton. Check commute times, parking, nearby schools and the feel of the road, then set the rental budget agreement in principle so the ceiling is clear.
In a busy market, the strongest properties do not sit around for long, so it helps to stay focused on homes that fit both the budget and the daily routine. Our live Bolton feed on home.co.uk shows what is actually available right now.
Daylight helps. Try to see the road at the time you would usually travel as well. A place near the station can change the week, and so can a quieter cul-de-sac once you are living there.
Before signing, ask for the tenancy terms, deposit details, EPC rating and inventory. Where a landlord wants references, getting those papers together early can stop the application from stalling.
Build the budget around the first month’s rent, the tenancy deposit and any holding deposit that applies. When we compare a few options, we also look at bills, council tax and travel, because that is where the real monthly cost shows up.
Before the keys are handed over, confirm the handover date, meter readings and the contact details for repairs. Once moved in, update the address, set up the utilities and keep the inventory close to hand.
Older terraces in Bolton can come in at attractive prices, though they are the sort of homes that reward a close look at the roof, the windows and any sign of damp or older patch repairs. A lot of these houses have practical layouts that still work well, but energy performance can vary sharply from one street to the next. Ask what has been done on heating, insulation and recent upgrades, because winter running costs matter just as much as the rent. Even a quick read of the EPC can tell us plenty about comfort levels in the colder months.
Flats and conversions call for a different checklist. Leasehold arrangements can bring extra costs, and service charges, ground rent or shared maintenance can change the true monthly outlay even where the headline rent looks tempting. Parking needs checking early too, especially near the town centre or on roads where permit spaces are doing most of the work. And where a property sits in or near a conservation area, outside alterations and later works may be more restricted, so it makes sense to ask before committing.
In lower-lying parts of the borough, or close to routes where heavy rain tends to build up, it is sensible to check surface water and drainage. Bolton has many well-kept streets, but every area still has houses where gutters, gardens or access paths deserve a second look after bad weather. Noise can matter just as much, particularly near busy roads, Bolton station or regular bus corridors. Often, the best rental is the one that gets the practical balance right.
home.co.uk does not give one single live town-wide average rent for Bolton, so the clearest guide comes from the asking prices by agent. At present, Openrent averages £875, Harrisons Estate Agents £994, Entwistle Green £937, Regency Estates £1,012 and Prime & Management £1,173. That range leaves room for different budgets, from straightforward starter homes to larger places with more space or a sharper finish. Final rent still turns on the exact location, the size, the condition and how near the property is to transport or well-regarded schools.
Council tax in Bolton is billed by Bolton Council, and the band sits with the individual property rather than the street name alone. Two homes on the same road can end up in different bands where size, layout or historic valuation are not the same. Smaller flats and terraces often sit lower. Larger semis and detached houses can sit higher. Before signing, we would always ask the agent to confirm the current band because it changes the real monthly spend.
School choice is a major part of renting here, and Bolton has no shortage of names that come up repeatedly, including Bolton School, Canon Slade School, Smithills School, Turton School and Harper Green School. For post-16 and vocational routes, Bolton College is a key option, while the University of Bolton keeps higher education close to home. The right fit depends on catchment, travel time and the age of the children, so admissions rules need a careful check. A rental can look spot on in photos and still become awkward once the school run starts.
For a town of this size, Bolton covers day-to-day travel well. Bolton station and Bolton Interchange anchor the rail and bus network, Manchester and Preston are both manageable commuter destinations, and buses run out across the suburbs and nearby towns through the day. Drivers have the M61 and the A666, which is another plus. For households that mix the car with public transport, Bolton can handle both in one routine.
For many renters, it does. Our live feed on home.co.uk currently shows 516 rental listings across 100 agents in Bolton, which gives far more scope for comparison than some single-town markets manage. The choice works for commuters, families, students and people who want more space than they may get nearer central Manchester. In the end, the best result usually comes from pairing the right part of Bolton with the commute, the budget and the way you want the week to run.
Most renters need to budget for the first month’s rent, a tenancy deposit and sometimes a holding deposit while the paperwork is moving through. The exact total depends on the rent, the landlord’s terms and the tenancy type, so ask for the full breakdown before applying. For anyone renting now and thinking about buying in Bolton later, the current purchase bands are 0% up to £250k, 5% from £250k to £925k, 10% from £925k to £1.5m and 12% above that, with first-time buyer relief up to £425k and tapering to £625k. Those figures are for purchases rather than tenancies, but they are still useful in a longer move plan.
Demand usually gathers fastest around the town centre, Bolton station and the suburban pockets with quicker morning journeys. Family renters often spend time looking at Horwich, Lostock, Heaton, Harwood, Egerton and Bromley Cross, because each one feels a little different. Some households want to stay nearer shops and cafés. Others would rather have a calmer road, more parking and extra space. The choice often turns on travel time, school access or how quiet you want day-to-day life to be.
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From £499
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From £350
Useful when weighing a Bolton rental against a later purchase
Up-front rental costs in Bolton usually mean the first month’s rent, a tenancy deposit and, where it applies, a holding deposit. With current asking rents on home.co.uk sitting between £875 and £1,173 at agent level, it makes sense to budget for more than the headline figure. Council tax, utilities, broadband and travel all need factoring in, especially near the station or in a family area with a longer commute. A rental budget agreement in principle gives a clearer view of what can be afforded comfortably before applications start going in.
Should Bolton become somewhere you want to buy later on, the current purchase thresholds are worth keeping in mind. The 2024-25 bands are 0% up to £250k, 5% from £250k to £925k, 10% from £925k to £1.5m and 12% above £1.5m, with first-time buyer relief up to £425k and tapered relief up to £625k. They do not apply to renting. They are still useful, though, for anyone planning a move from tenancy to purchase. For now, we would compare the likely monthly rent, the deposit and the everyday bills before choosing a home.

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This calculator provides estimates for illustrative purposes only and does not constitute financial advice. Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. Estimates based on 4.5% interest rate, repayment mortgage. Actual rates depend on your circumstances.
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