Aerial view of Dulwich neighbourhood, London

Dulwich

Last updated 6 July 2026
⏱ 8 min read

Executive Summary: Dulwich

Where in London
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Dulwich on the London boroughs map
Inner LondonOuter London

Key Strengths

  • Low crime for inner London — crime 35% below the London average (Safety Score 80/100), one of the lower-crime areas we cover.
  • Renowned schools — three Outstanding state primaries, plus the independent Dulwich College, Alleyn’s and JAGS that define the area.
  • Georgian-village character — a conservation-area high street, period houses, Dulwich Park and the 1817 Dulwich Picture Gallery.
  • Useful rail links — West Dulwich to Victoria in 13 minutes, North Dulwich to London Bridge in 15, despite no Tube.
  • Strong, steady growth — up 17.3% over five years, one of the few SE London areas still rising.

Key Considerations

  • Expensive — homes average £768k, terraces top £1m and detached houses average over £2m; affordability scores low (44/100).
  • No Underground — rail-only; frequency and the deep-City run (Bank 31 min) lag a Tube area.
  • The famous schools are mostly private — fees around £20k+; state secondary choice is thinner than the reputation implies.
  • Quiet, sleepy evenings — one main pub and little nightlife; residents head to Herne Hill, Peckham or Brixton.
  • The Dulwich Estate controls alterations — its Scheme of Management restricts changes to many houses; West Dulwich sits in Lambeth, not Southwark.

Property Prices in Dulwich

Property prices and residential streets in Dulwich,
Flats & Apartments
Too few recent sales to quote a median
Terraced Houses
Too few recent sales to quote a median
Semi-Detached
Too few recent sales to quote a median
Detached
Too few recent sales to quote a median

Source: HM Land Registry Price Paid Data — median sold prices over a rolling 12-month window

What Your Budget Buys

Source: HM Land Registry.

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Schools in Dulwich

Primary and secondary schools near Dulwich,

🏫 Primary

0 Outstanding
0 Good

🏛 Secondary

0 Outstanding
0 Good
Primary
Secondary
Independent
|
Outstanding
Good / Other
No primary schools listed
No secondary schools listed

Data: Ofsted, 2026

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Transport & Commute: Dulwich

Tube, rail and bus transport links in Dulwich,

Commute Times

Source: TfL Journey Planner, 2026. All times are station-to-station (boarding to alighting); add 5–10 minutes for walking to your nearest station and waiting.

Crime & Safety in Dulwich

Crime safety and residential streets in Dulwich,
80
PAL Safety Score
out of 100 · benchmarked against all of London
80
Crimes per 1,000
residential basis · visitor/footfall theft set aside
24%
Theft
Largest crime type

Top Concern

Theft
24% of total offences
On a residential basis, Dulwich’s recorded crime runs 35% below the London average on a severity-weighted basis, giving a Safety Score of 80/100 — benchmarked against all of London, not just the areas we cover.

Source: Metropolitan Police via data.police.uk · Population: ONS Census 2021 · Updated monthly

✦ PAL In-Depth

The Numbers

Safety is Dulwich’s standout dimension, and the numbers are plain. The area carries a PAL Safety Score of 80/100, and residential crime runs at around 80 crimes per 1,000 residents over the 12 months to April 2026 (data.police.uk) — roughly 35% below the London average. This is genuinely low crime, not a quirk of how a busy town centre’s figures are calculated: Dulwich is a settled residential area with no large retail or nightlife district to inflate the count.

What the Data Tells You

The honest read is that Dulwich is a low-crime area, and one whose profile matters as much as its headline. It is theft-led rather than violence-led: the largest single category is Theft, at about 24% of recorded crime, which is what you would expect in an affluent, settled neighbourhood — opportunistic, low-level theft that follows value rather than the volume offending of a retail or nightlife district. There is no busy night-time economy here driving the figures up.

Street-Level Context

The pattern is quietly residential almost everywhere. The village core (SE21 7), the streets around College Road and the West Dulwich roads are settled and low-incident; what theft there is tends to follow value — homes, cars and bikes in an affluent area — rather than clustering in a single hotspot, because there is no town centre to concentrate it. The busier edges, where Dulwich meets Herne Hill, East Dulwich and the larger through-roads, carry marginally more activity than the village’s quiet interior, but the contrast is modest by London standards.

What Residents Say

Residents experience Dulwich as calm, and the data backs that up. The practical takeaway for a buyer is simply to match precautions to an affluent low-crime area: opportunistic theft is the realistic risk, so secure bikes with a proper D-lock, keep nothing visible in parked cars on the quieter roads, and treat the busier edges near the commons and through-routes with ordinary city sense after dark. None of this is unusual; it is the baseline care any affluent residential area warrants, in a place where the genuine low-crime figure is the headline, not a caveat.

Council Fees in Dulwich

Local authority: London Borough of Southwark

Source: London Borough of Southwark, 2026

Dulwich Community Character

Source: Google Maps, OS Open Greenspace & editorial research, 2026

PAL Overall Score
Dulwich
0
out of 100
Below Average

One of London's low-crime, greenest and most school-famous villages — Georgian calm and £768k price tags, 13 minutes from Victoria but no Tube.

Dulwich is a Georgian village of period houses, ancient woods and renowned schools — calm, green and expensive. The average home sells for N/A. West Dulwich reaches Victoria in minutes, though there is no Tube.

🛡️
80
Safety

Dulwich scores 0/100 on the PAL Score — our weighted rating across six core criteria that define what makes a London neighbourhood work for buyers.

How We Score

Each criterion is normalised on a 0–100 scale across every London neighbourhood we cover, so a score describes how Dulwich compares with the rest of the city, not an absolute mark.

The Breakdown

Criterion Score (/100) What it means
Safety 80 Genuinely low crime — around 35% below the London average, theft-led and quiet rather than violence-driven.
Local Amenities 47 Village shops, the Picture Gallery and parks, but spread out and without a large central high street.
Property Price Affordability 0 Expensive — a median of N/A; the premium buys the village and schools, not the commute.
School Quality 0 Strong state primaries but thinner state secondaries; the famous schools here are private, which this score excludes.
Transport Connectivity 0 Fast direct trains to Victoria and London Bridge, but no Tube and no fallback when a line is down.
Green Space Access 0 Dulwich, Belair and Sydenham Hill woods are genuine assets, but the normalised score lands below average.

Scores use the PAL 0–100 scale, z-score normalised across all London neighbourhoods and displayed as integers. See the PAL Score Architecture for methodology.

What This Means

Safety (80/100) carries Dulwich — it is comfortably the strongest dimension, and a real one: recorded crime runs around 35% below the London average and is theft-led rather than violent, so this is genuine calm rather than a statistical quirk. After that, the scores tell a story of a prestigious area that PAL measures on dimensions where prestige does not help. Affordability (0) is weak because Dulwich is expensive, with a median around N/A. Schools (0) score below average because the metric counts state schools — strong on primaries, thinner on secondaries — and excludes the private Dulwich College, Alleyn’s and JAGS that make the name famous. Transport (0) is held down by the no-Tube, rail-only reality, even though West Dulwich reaches Victoria in minutes and North Dulwich London Bridge in 15. Green space (0) is the lowest of all, which surprises people given Dulwich Park, Belair Park and the ancient woodland — the parks are real assets, but the normalised metric lands below average and we report it as it is. The Local Amenities score (47) reflects a village that is pleasant but spread out, without one large high street. The resulting 0/100 is a Below Average score, and the honest reading is that it is Fair despite the prestige, not because the area is poor — PAL scores affordability, connectivity and state schools, and Dulwich’s fame rests on none of them.

✦ PAL In-Depth

💰 Value Assessment

At an average of £768,000, Dulwich is among the priciest neighbourhoods we cover — terraces average £1,079,109 and detached homes £2,105,125 (HM Land Registry, 12 months to 2026). It edges adjacent East Dulwich (£760,000) and sits far above Peckham (£525,000) one zone closer in. The premium buys safety, period houses and the schools, not connectivity. Five-year growth of 17.3% has held value better than most of inner SE London — but the affordability score of 44/100 is honest: this is a buy for those who can stretch.

Our Recommendation

Dulwich suits families who can afford it and who put safety, space, period character and schools above connectivity, nightlife and price. You trade the Tube, lively evenings and affordability for a Georgian village, some of the country's best schools (mostly private), and one of London's lowest crime rates. Buyers who need a fast deep-City commute, a buzzy high street or value for money should look one zone in to Peckham or East Dulwich. Those who want a calm, green, school-focused family base — and have the budget — will find few places better.

Who's Dulwich for?

Dulwich is likely to suit you if:

  • Are buying for the schools and settling in. The state primaries are strong (three Outstanding) and the private ecosystem — Dulwich College, Alleyn’s, JAGS — is among London’s best, all within a short walk or drive.
  • Commute to Victoria or London Bridge. West Dulwich runs direct to Victoria in minutes and North Dulwich to London Bridge in 15 — two fast, direct links for a no-Tube area.
  • Want a quiet, low-crime area. Recorded crime runs around 35% below the London average and is theft-led rather than violent — safety is Dulwich’s standout strength.
  • Want a period house and green space. The village core is dominated by large Georgian, Victorian and Edwardian houses, with Dulwich Park, Belair Park and ancient woodland close by.
  • Value scarcity holding value. Conservation controls and the Dulwich Estate keep supply tight, and prices are up 17.3% over five years (HM Land Registry) while Peckham has cooled.

Think twice if you:

  • Are watching the budget. Dulwich is expensive — a median of N/A and a value score of 0 — and the premium over Peckham buys the village, not the commute.
  • Need the Underground or a fast deep-City run. There is no Tube; Bank needs a change at minutes, and a disrupted rail line leaves no quick fallback.
  • Want lively evenings. This is a residential village with a quiet night-time scene — there is no real after-dark economy here.
  • Plan to alter or extend a house. The Dulwich Estate’s Scheme of Management governs external changes on top of council planning, adding fees, a consultation period and lead time.
  • Are buying a flat for yield. Gross yields sit at roughly 3.5–4.5% against high flat values — this is a capital-growth market, not an income one.

The Real Picture

Dulwich is a prosperous conservation-area village that scores merely Fair — and that contradiction is the point. It is safe, green, characterful and famous for its schools, but PAL measures affordability, connectivity and state schools, none of which are its strengths: it is expensive, rail-only with no Tube, and its school fame is private. What you actually get is calm, period houses, good state primaries, real green space and two fast trains, wrapped in a quiet that some buyers find idyllic and others find sleepy. It settles families and long-term rooters happily; it frustrates anyone who wants a Tube, a bargain or a buzzy evening.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about living in Dulwich, answered with data from our research.

Data from HM Land Registry, Ofsted, Metropolitan Police & TfL. Last updated 6 July 2026.

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