Moving from London to Northamptonshire with a Family

You’ve had the thought. Probably more than once. The school question is getting louder, the house feels smaller, and London, which used to feel like everything, is starting to feel like a lot.

If you’re searching for what family life might look like outside the M25, this page is for you. I’ll cover the three questions every family asks me: the schools, the commute, and the timing. In that order, because that’s usually the order they matter.

The School Question: Why Timing Matters More Than You Think

Half of my Northamptonshire clients move primarily for schools. They don’t always say that at the start of the conversation, but it usually emerges pretty quickly.

What most families don’t know, until it’s inconveniently late, is that where you live when you apply is what determines the school your child gets. Not where you intend to be by September. Not where you’re under offer. Where you are documented as living when the local authority assesses your application.

The closing dates for the September 2027 intake are:

  • Secondary school (Year 7 entry): 31 October 2026
  • Primary school (Reception entry): 15 January 2027

‘Living there’ means being physically resident at the property. For oversubscribed schools, which are typically the ones families are actually moving for, most councils and admissions authorities require genuine occupation, not just exchange of contracts. Some councils will accept a solicitor’s letter confirming exchange or a signed lease as evidence for an on-time application, but if the school is oversubscribed and the place is contested, actual residence is the safer position to be in. Don’t plan to still be completing when the deadline arrives.

If you miss the deadline, your application is processed using your current address. Your new address doesn’t come into play until the late allocation rounds, which typically start in April or May. National offer days for 2027 are 1 March for secondary and 16 April for primary.

One more thing most families don’t know until too late: several high-demand Northamptonshire secondaries, including Northampton School for Boys, are their own admission authorities. They require a Supplementary Information Form on top of the standard council application, also due by 31 October. If a selective or high-demand school is part of your plan, that’s an additional deadline running in parallel with your search.

A quick note on councils: Northamptonshire is now administered by two separate authorities, West Northamptonshire and North Northamptonshire. Their application deadlines are the same, but appeal timelines and late allocation rounds can differ. Worth knowing if your target area sits near the boundary.

Spring 2026 is not early for a September 2027 secondary start. It’s about right.

I say this not to panic you, but because nobody tells families this until the window has already got uncomfortable. The ones who call me having done the maths have a very different experience from the ones who arrive in September with an offer accepted but the paperwork not yet in place.

Not sure where your children are in the school year and what this means for your search? Call me. It’s a five-minute conversation and it’s genuinely the most useful five minutes you’ll spend today.

The Commute: Let’s Deal With This Early

This is usually the first objection, and it’s a fair one. If one or both of you is still working in London regularly, the commute has to work. Or the move doesn’t.

  • Northampton to London Euston: under 50 minutes on a fast train
  • Long Buckby is closer to the M1 if you’re a driver and trains don’t suit
  • Banbury connects to Marylebone, which works well if you’re in the City or Canary Wharf end
  • Annual season tickets from Northampton are considerably cheaper than equivalent journeys from Surrey or Hertfordshire

For hybrid workers (and most of the families I work with now are), two or three days a week in London from Northamptonshire is genuinely comfortable. You get used to it surprisingly fast, particularly when the other side of the commute is a village rather than a flat.

The M1 runs through the middle of the county, which either sounds brilliant or alarming depending on which road you live near. In practice, it makes Northamptonshire extremely well connected in all directions.

What Families Find Here and Why They Don’t Leave

Northamptonshire is still genuinely undervalued. That’s not a sales pitch. It’s what the numbers say every time I do a comparison with Surrey, Hertfordshire, or even parts of Oxfordshire.

Families coming from south-west London in particular regularly find they can afford a house two or three sizes bigger, with a garden that the children can actually use, in a village where the primary school has a waiting list for a reason. The county has everything you need for family life:

  • Strong state schools, including some with Ofsted Outstanding ratings that feed into sought-after secondaries
  • Good range of independent schools within reach: Rugby, Stowe, Oundle, Bloxham, each with a very different character
  • Countryside that’s accessible rather than aspirational: the Northamptonshire Uplands, Rockingham Forest, plenty of canal and reservoir walks
  • Market towns with proper independent high streets: Towcester, Daventry, Brackley, rather than identikit retail parks
  • Silverstone if that’s your thing. The noise carries, but the buzz of a Grand Prix weekend is something else entirely.

People call it the Secret Shire. It’s still a fair description. The families who move here tend to stay.

How the Move Usually Works and Where Families Get Stuck

The families I work with are mostly coming from London or the commuter belt. They know they want to go. They often don’t know quite where. And they are, without exception, short on time.

Running a proper property search while working full time, managing children, and trying to understand a county you don’t know well is a lot. That’s precisely what a buying agent is for.

I get the full brief from you: what you need in a home, which school situation you’re working to, commute constraints, non-negotiables on location, budget. Then I work the patch: on market, off market, and through the relationships I have with local agents who know to call me when something comes in that fits.

I preview properties before you make the trip. I won’t waste your weekends on houses that won’t work. When something genuinely fits, we go together, and I know enough about each village, each school catchment, each stretch of road to give you a proper read on what you’re actually buying into.

I negotiate on your behalf once you’ve found the right house. I’m not emotionally attached to any particular property, which means I negotiate better than most buyers can for themselves at that stage.

Wondering Whether This is the Right Move for Your Family?

Book a Discovery Call. It costs nothing and commits nobody. I can tell you pretty quickly whether Northamptonshire makes sense for your specific situation, which areas I’d be looking at for your school requirements, and what a realistic timeline looks like.

If it’s not the right fit, I’ll say so. I’d rather have a short honest conversation than a long frustrating search.

07502 406688
racheljohnston@stacks.co.uk

Call Rachel Johnston to discuss what you are looking for.
Tel: 07502 406688

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