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Browse 19 rental homes to rent in Coventry, West Midlands from local letting agents.
The larger property sector typically features multiple bathrooms, substantial reception space, and private gardens or off-street parking. Four bedroom houses in Coventry span detached, semi-detached, and occasionally terraced configurations, with styles ranging from period properties to modern executive homes.
£1,300/m
11
0
67
Source: home.co.uk
Showing 11 results for 4 Bedroom Houses to rent in Coventry, West Midlands. The median asking price is £1,300/month.
Source: home.co.uk
Terraced
5 listings
Avg £1,289
Detached
3 listings
Avg £1,883
Semi-Detached
3 listings
Avg £1,482
Source: home.co.uk
Source: home.co.uk
Coventry’s private rental sector has grown quickly over the past decade, helped by a broader employment base and steady appeal for students, young professionals and families. The city centre looks different now, with new apartment complexes adding modern homes for renters who want contemporary amenities and the option to get to shops or entertainment venues on foot. Beyond the centre, the housing stock shifts again, from Victorian terraces to 1930s semis, which gives renters a much wider spread of choice.
According to our current listings data, one and two-bedroom apartments in Coventry usually rent for £600 to £950 per month, depending on location and specification. Move up to three or four bedrooms and the usual range is £1,000 to £1,600 per month, with higher figures in places such as Earlsdon and Stoneleigh. The University of Warwick and Coventry University keep the market moving throughout the academic year, not only for student accommodation but also for postgraduates and university staff. In areas close to the universities, including Canley, Wainbody and the city centre, properties often let quickly in peak moving seasons.
A solid group of major employers keeps demand coming in from across the region. Jaguar Land Rover’s Whitley plant employs thousands, and some staff rent in Coventry before they buy. University Hospital Coventry is another of the area’s biggest employers, so healthcare staff regularly look for homes that cut the journey. There is movement in the creative and digital sector too, centred on Coventry University and the city’s technology hubs, which suits renters who want lower costs without giving up an urban setting.

Coventry has its own look within the West Midlands. The rebuilt cathedral stands beside medieval church spires and more recent architecture, so the townscape is not easily confused with anywhere else. The Coventry Telegraph has described it as “a city transformed” in recent years, reflecting major regeneration, new public spaces and a better city centre experience. People in Coventry are often spoken of as warm and resilient, and that shows up in neighbourhoods across the city.
Green space is one of Coventry’s quieter strengths. War Memorial Park gives residents over 100 acres of recreational space, and the historic Coventry Canal creates walking and cycling routes that connect residential areas back into the city centre. To the east, Coombe Abbey Country Park opens up countryside access for people living in Binley, Wyken and Stoke. Earlsdon gets a lot of attention from renters because of its village atmosphere, local shops, cafes and active community, while Cheylesmore attracts similar interest thanks to its position near the city centre and its schools. Radford, by contrast, is often where renters look for lower-cost options and solid connections around the city.
The cultural side of Coventry has picked up pace as well. The Belgrade Theatre, Coventry Music Hub and the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum all run regular events and learning programmes. The Coventry Blitz Museum and the Transport Museum bring in visitors from around the region, and Godiva Festival in War Memorial Park puts local music and arts centre stage each year. For evenings out, the city centre now has a wider food and drink offer, and Cathedral Lanes is a familiar choice for many younger renters and families.

Education shapes plenty of rental decisions in Coventry. The city has options at each stage, including King Henry VIII School, the long-established independent school, and West Coventry Academy. Renters focused on state education often concentrate on Styvechale, Cheylesmore and Tile Hill because schools there regularly draw strong parental interest on the back of academic results and good Ofsted ratings. Catchments matter here. Places at the more in-demand schools can be competitive.
Two universities have an outsized effect on Coventry, both in the rental market and in day-to-day city life. The University of Warwick sits just outside the city boundary in Coventry and is consistently ranked among the UK’s top universities, with thousands of academic and administrative staff who often rent in nearby districts. Coventry University, based in the city centre, is also one of the biggest local employers and drives demand for student housing as well as rentals for young professionals who stay after graduating. Together they give Coventry a younger feel.
For younger children, primary provision is spread across the city rather than concentrated in one corner. Earlsdon Primary School, Stivichall Primary School and Howes Primary School are all well regarded by local families, which has a direct effect on nearby rental demand. Tile Hill is also part of that conversation because Tile Hill Wood School and Language College serves families from Cannon Park and the University of Warwick campus area. Before we commit to a property for school reasons, we always suggest checking the latest catchment boundaries and admission policies with Coventry City Council.

Coventry works well for regular travel. The city sits where the M6 and M69 meet, which gives direct road access west to Birmingham, east to Leicester and then onward into the wider motorway network. Coventry railway station has Virgin Trains services to London Euston in approximately 70 minutes, making a daily trip to the capital feasible for some renters. The West Coast Main Line also gives fast services to Birmingham New Street, Manchester and Liverpool.
Bus coverage is broad for people working around Coventry and the wider West Midlands, with National Express West Midlands and other operators serving the city. The Coventry to Nuneaton rail link is being upgraded, and discussion is still continuing around better public transport links to the University of Warwick campus. Cyclists have more support now too, because the city is putting money into dedicated cycling infrastructure and the Canal network provides traffic-free routes into the centre. One reason renters look here is simple, Coventry opens up jobs across the region while staying cheaper than Birmingham.
Getting to Birmingham city centre from Coventry is fairly simple, especially by rail. Journeys of around 25 minutes make day trips and occasional commuting realistic. By road, the A45 runs directly towards Birmingham through Allesley and the Eastern Green neighbourhood. Birmingham Airport is within 30 minutes by car, and East Midlands Airport is about 45 minutes away. Rugby, Warwick and Royal Leamington Spa are near enough for a weekend visit.

Before we start shortlisting properties, it helps to secure a rental budget agreement in principle from a financial provider. Landlords and letting agents use this as evidence that the rent is affordable, and they will often expect proof of income at around 30 times the monthly rent. Having that paperwork ready can make a difference in Coventry’s active rental market, especially when a popular property brings in several enquiries at once.
Coventry is not one place in housing terms. There is the city centre, then suburban villages such as Berkswell and Balsall Common, and the choice between them usually comes down to commute, school catchment and day-to-day habits. On our platform, we can filter by area, property type and price range to cut the search down to what actually fits. It is still worth visiting in person before making a decision, because the feel of one neighbourhood can differ sharply from the next.
Once we have picked out suitable properties, we can arrange viewings through our platform. At the viewing stage, it helps to look past the condition of the flat or house and pay attention to the street at different times of day. We check practical details, such as nearby shops, noise, parking and how the immediate area feels. In Coventry’s more in-demand districts, homes can go quickly, so being organised matters.
Once we decide to apply for a property, the next step is the application form and references. This usually covers employer references, previous landlord references and credit checks. Our tenant referencing service helps us move that along so the required checks are completed properly and without unnecessary delay. We should also have identification, proof of income and reference contact details ready to send over.
Before move-in day, there is normally a walkthrough with the landlord or agent to complete an inventory check on the condition of the property and its contents. Our inventory check service is there to make that record thorough and fair, which protects the deposit as well as the landlord’s property. Once that is finished, the tenancy agreement is signed and the keys are handed over.
Renting in Coventry needs the usual checks, but a few local details are worth keeping in mind before a tenancy starts. Parts of Earlsdon and the city centre fall within conservation areas, so planning restrictions can limit the changes tenants can make to a property. If a home falls into that category, we should raise any proposed modifications with the landlord before signing. Coventry also has a fair amount of older housing stock, and Victorian and Edwardian terraces in particular can need closer attention on insulation, damp proofing and window quality.
In Coventry, plenty of rental homes are managed by agents acting for the landlord, so routine contact during the tenancy may pass through a third party. It is worth confirming before move-in who deals with maintenance and what response times apply to common issues. Newer apartment developments can also bring service charges and ground rent into the picture, and some landlords pass service charge contributions on to tenants. We always read the tenancy agreement closely for maintenance duties, utilities and the condition the property has to be left in at the end.
Comparing Coventry properties on rent alone can be misleading. Distance from a workplace, or from a main rail or road route, can shift both the monthly budget and day-to-day convenience. Coundon, Styvechale and Finham are often considered by households who want family facilities and a settled local feel, while city centre homes tend to suit renters who want to get around on foot and stay near restaurants or entertainment. Parking is another point that changes a lot from area to area, with suburban neighbourhoods usually offering more than the centre.

Average rents in Coventry move quite a bit by property type and by location. In the city centre, one-bedroom apartments typically sit at £600 to £800 per month, while two-bedroom homes usually come in at £750 to £950. A house with three bedrooms commonly rents for £1,000 to £1,300 per month, and larger family homes in the more in-demand areas can reach £1,500 or more. For like-for-like homes, Coventry is still noticeably cheaper than Birmingham.
Coventry falls under Coventry City Council, and council tax bands run from A to H according to property value. A large share of band A and B homes sit in the lower council tax brackets, which matters to renters watching monthly costs closely. We can check the exact band through the Coventry City Council website, or ask the letting agent before agreeing a tenancy. In Coventry, the bill typically includes charges for police services, fire services and local amenities, with the total usually spread over ten monthly instalments.
School choice comes up again and again in Coventry searches. At secondary level, King Henry VIII School and The West Coventry Academy are regular picks, while at primary level Earlsdon Primary and Tile Hill Wood School are often noted for good results. For sixth form education, Coventry has Sixth Form colleges as well as sixth forms attached to several secondary schools. Address still matters, because admission policies and catchments decide which schools serve each rental property.
Public transport coverage is strong for a city of Coventry’s size. Coventry railway station has fast services to London, Birmingham and the wider network through Virgin Trains and CrossCountry services. Local buses run by National Express West Midlands and other operators link the main neighbourhoods with the city centre and nearby towns. The city is also putting money into better public transport infrastructure, which makes living without a car more workable for renters close to key interchanges.
For renters looking at the West Midlands, Coventry makes a practical case. Jobs come from Jaguar Land Rover, the University of Warwick, Coventry University and University Hospital Coventry, which keeps tenant demand steady. Regeneration has altered the city centre, and areas such as Earlsdon, Cheylesmore and Styvechale continue to hold attention from renters. Rents are lower than Birmingham in many comparisons, and the links to other major cities add to the appeal.
In Coventry, standard practice follows the Tenant Fees Act 2019. That means most letting agents cannot charge beyond rent, deposit and a reasonable holding deposit. The security deposit is capped at five weeks’ rent where the annual rent is below £50,000. Anyone renting for the first time should budget for the first month’s rent in advance and the deposit, plus any possible costs tied to tenant referencing, an inventory check or setting up utilities. On our platform, we set out the likely costs early so we can budget properly.
Upfront costs in Coventry can catch first-time renters out if they are not planned for. The deposit is usually the biggest initial expense after the first month’s rent, and for properties with annual rent below £50,000 it is typically five weeks’ rent. That deposit has to be protected in a government-approved scheme within 30 days of the tenancy start date, and it should be returned at the end of the tenancy unless there are legitimate deductions for damage or unpaid rent. Our inventory check service records the condition at both the start and the end, which helps protect each side.
Rent and deposit are not always the whole picture. In Coventry, renters may also come across tenant referencing costs to check identity, employment and previous rental history. Some landlords or agents ask for guarantors, especially where the applicant is a student or has limited rental history, so a parent or guardian may have to step in if financial difficulties arise. Utility setup costs, including gas, electricity, water and internet connection, should also go into the moving budget. Our platform lays out these associated costs clearly so the financial picture is easier to judge.
It is also worth watching for charges beyond the base rent. Some Coventry properties ask tenants to contribute towards building maintenance or service charge costs, and the amount can vary a lot depending on the type of property and the development. City centre apartments often carry higher service charges than suburban houses. Looking at the full cost of renting, not just the advertised rent, makes it easier to judge what really fits the budget.

From 4.5% APR
We recommend getting a mortgage in principle so landlords can see that the rent is affordable.
From £30
We complete reference checks early to help speed up the rental application.
From £75
Professional condition report to protect your deposit
From £60
Energy performance certificate for your rental property
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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.
Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.