Aerial view of Greenford neighbourhood, London

Greenford

Last updated 6 July 2026
⏱ 8 min read

Executive Summary: Greenford

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

Key Strengths

  • A direct Central line Tube — Bond Street in 25 minutes and Oxford Circus in 27, rare for a Zone 4 outer suburb.
  • Genuine affordability — a whole 1930s house with a garden well below West-London prices; joint-strongest of Greenford’s six PAL dimensions (value 0).
  • 13 schools, 92% Good or Outstanding — including two Outstanding secondaries (William Perkin CofE High and The Cardinal Wiseman Catholic) and Outstanding Gifford Primary.
  • Below-average crime — 26% below the London average (Safety Score 72/100).
  • Real green space — Horsenden Hill’s 100 hectares, Perivale Park, Ravenor Park and the Grand Union Canal towpath.

Key Considerations

  • A functional high street — chains and food shops plus the Westway Cross retail park, rather than an independent destination.
  • A steady, modest market — up 6.9% over five years and marginally down over the past year; not a quick-growth play.
  • Quiet evenings — little going-out scene; a proper night out means the Central line into town.
  • Detached homes uncommon — around 4% of the stock; Greenford is 1930s semis and terraces.
  • A plain, working West London suburb — practical and diverse rather than a fashionable postcode.

Property Prices in Greenford

Property prices and residential streets in Greenford,
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 Greenford

Primary and secondary schools near Greenford,

🏫 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: Greenford

Tube, rail and bus transport links in Greenford,

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 Greenford

Crime safety and residential streets in Greenford,
72
PAL Safety Score
out of 100 · benchmarked against all of London
93
Crimes per 1,000
residential basis · visitor/footfall theft set aside
↓ 11.2%
12-Month Trend
Year-on-year change
29%
Violence and sexual offences
Largest crime type

Top Concern

Violence and sexual offences
29% of total offences
On a residential basis, Greenford’s recorded crime runs 26% below the London average on a severity-weighted basis, giving a Safety Score of 72/100 — benchmarked against all of London, not just the areas we cover. Crime concentrates in the Central Greenford and Greenford Broadway ward areas, with North Greenford notably quieter. The most common offence type is Violence and sexual offences (29% of recorded crime).

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

✦ PAL In-Depth

The Numbers

Greenford records around 93 crimes per 1,000 residents over the 12 months to April 2026 (data.police.uk) — roughly 26% below the London average. On the PAL Safety score, which places every neighbourhood we cover on a single 0–100 scale, Greenford lands at 72/100, a lower-crime rating that reflects a settled, residential suburb rather than a busy centre. The 12-month trend is Falling (-11.2%), so the direction of travel is a positive too.

What the Data Tells You

The honest read is that Greenford is a genuinely lower-crime area — a Safety score of 72/100, with recorded crime 26% below the London average and a 12-month trend that is Falling (-11.2%). The largest single category is Violence and sexual offences, at around 29% of recorded crime, which is the usual leading category across most of outer London — it is what the data shows for area after area, and it is stated here factually rather than as a warning. Greenford’s overall picture is that of a quiet residential suburb, and the category mix reflects the ordinary shape of recorded crime rather than anything specific to the place.

Street-Level Context

The pattern is quietly residential across most of the area, with what activity there is concentrating around the busier Broadway and the retail parks where footfall is highest. Move out into the interwar residential streets toward Perivale and up toward Horsenden Lane, and the picture is settled and low-incident. The closer you buy to the Broadway and the shops, the more of the everyday high-street texture you take on; the quieter streets a few minutes out feel firmly suburban and calm.

What Residents Say

Residents experience Greenford as a plain, settled, get-on-with-it suburb, and the data backs that up. One local, weighing the area on Reddit, described it as “fine but definitely not an exciting suburb — there’s not so much in terms of restaurants or pubs” — a fair summary of a place that reads calm rather than lively. The practical takeaway for a buyer is ordinary city sense: keep an eye on bags and phones around the Broadway and the retail parks, secure bikes with a proper D-lock near the station, and keep nothing visible in parked cars. None of this is unusual for London, and in Greenford the genuine lower-crime picture — a Safety score of 72/100 — is the headline, not a caveat.

Council Fees in Greenford

Local authority: London Borough of Ealing

Source: London Borough of Ealing, 2026

Greenford Community Character

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

PAL Overall Score
Greenford
0
out of 100
Below Average

Affordable 1930s houses, a direct Central line to Bond Street and a settled, safe feel — a practical Zone 4 family suburb that has held its value.

Greenford is a plain, houses-first outer-London suburb in the London Borough of Ealing (UB6), built around 1930s semi-detached and terraced homes, a direct Central line station and real green space at Horsenden Hill.

🛡️
72
Safety

Greenford 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 Greenford compares with the rest of the city, not an absolute mark.

The Breakdown

Criterion Score (/100) What it means
Safety 72 A lower-crime, settled suburb — recorded crime 26% below the London average, with a 12-month trend that is Falling (-11.2%).
Property Price Affordability 0 Joint-strongest dimension — a whole house with a garden well below West-London prices; affordability is a core reason to look here.
Green Space Access 0 Horsenden Hill’s 100 hectares, Perivale Park, Ravenor Park and the canal towpath, though the normalised score reads lower than the offer feels.
Transport Connectivity 0 A direct Central line to Bond Street in 25 minutes — rare for Zone 4 — though the distance holds the normalised score down.
School Quality 0 13 schools, two Outstanding secondaries; strong ratings on the ground, but the normalised score weighs coverage and lands modest.
Local Amenities 38 A functional Broadway of chains and food shops plus the Westway Cross retail park — everyday rather than a destination.

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 (72/100) and affordability (0) share the top of Greenford’s card, and both are real: recorded crime sits 26% below the London average with a 12-month trend that is Falling (-11.2%), and the money buys a whole house with a garden rather than a flat. Green space (0) lands lower than Horsenden Hill’s 100 hectares suggest it should, because the normalised measure weights density and access across the built-up streets rather than one large landmark on the edge. Transport (0) reads modest on the number, but the story behind it is Greenford’s best feature — a direct Central line to Bond Street in 25 minutes, which most Zone 4 suburbs cannot offer; the score reflects the distance, not the quality of the link. Schools (0) are stronger on the ground than the figure implies — two Outstanding secondaries is a genuine draw — but the normalised measure weighs coverage and quantity, so the score stays modest. Local amenities (38) reflect a functional high street rather than a smart one. The resulting 0/100 is a Below Average score, and the honest reading is that Greenford is a value-and-safety suburb with a standout Tube link, held back on the numbers by amenities and by scores that do not fully credit its two best real-world features — the direct Central line and the two Outstanding secondaries.

✦ PAL In-Depth

💰 Value Assessment

At an average of N/A and about £552 per square foot (HM Land Registry, June 2026), Greenford is priced for space and a direct Tube rather than a smart postcode, and affordability is a standout — value score 0, joint-highest of its six dimensions. The 6.9% five-year rise is modest but genuine; the −0.2% one-year figure confirms a market that has flattened rather than fallen. Tellingly, Greenford now averages slightly above neighbouring Acton (£496,000) despite being a Zone further out, because Acton has dropped 11.2% over five years while Greenford held — money here buys a house with a garden that has kept its value.

Our Recommendation

Buy in Greenford if you want a whole house with a garden, a direct Central line to the West End and good state schools at a price well below most of West London, and you can live with a functional high street and quiet evenings. Look elsewhere if you need a lively night-time scene, a smart independent high street, or quick capital growth — but note Greenford has held value while a livelier neighbour like Acton has slipped.

Who's Greenford for?

Greenford is likely to suit you if:

  • Commute to the West End. Greenford runs direct on the Central line to Bond Street in 25 minutes and Oxford Circus in 27 — a genuine Tube, rare for an outer Zone 4 suburb.
  • Want a whole house with a garden for the money. Greenford is a houses-majority suburb of 1930s semis and terraces, and affordability is its joint-strongest dimension — value score 0.
  • Have school-age children and want state options. The area has 13 schools, 92% Good or Outstanding, including two Outstanding secondaries — William Perkin CofE High School and The Cardinal Wiseman Catholic School.
  • Value a genuinely settled, lower-crime suburb. Greenford’s recorded crime runs 26% below the London average, the 12-month trend is Falling (-11.2%), and the Safety score is 72/100.
  • Want real green space on the doorstep. Horsenden Hill’s 100 hectares of meadow and woodland, plus Perivale Park, Ravenor Park and the Grand Union Canal towpath, give proper green edges rather than a token park.

Think twice if you:

  • Want a lively evening scene. This is a quiet suburb — a handful of pubs, casual curry houses and an early-closing Broadway — and for a proper night out you take the Central line into town.
  • Are banking on capital growth. Greenford is a steady, modest market — up 6.9% over five years and marginally down at −0.2% over the past year (HM Land Registry) — not a fast-appreciating one.
  • Want a smart, independent high street. Greenford Broadway is a functional parade — a Tesco Metro, an Iceland and food shops — not a destination; the draw is the houses and the Tube, not the shops.
  • Want a detached house. Detached homes are uncommon here at around 4% of stock and barely trade — only about nine sold in a year — so expect a long search; the neighbourhood is semi-detached and terraced 1930s houses.
  • Are chasing a fashionable postcode. Greenford is a plain, working West London suburb, and it reads that way — it rewards the practical buyer, not the status one.

The Real Picture

Greenford is a plain, houses-first outer-London suburb that quietly does the practical things well. You get a whole 1930s house with a garden for less than most of West London, a direct Central line to the West End, two Outstanding secondaries, genuinely low crime and real green space in Horsenden Hill — and you accept, in return, a functional high street, quiet evenings and modest price growth. It has held its value while a livelier neighbour like Acton has slipped, and its Tube is the thing that sets it apart from most Zone 4 suburbs. It settles families and commuters happily; it frustrates anyone chasing a buzz, a bargain-turned-quick-profit, or a smart postcode.

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