Location:

Leeds is the cultural, financial and commercial heart of West Yorkshire and is one of the UK’s foremost regional cities. It is located approximately 70km (43.5 miles) north east of Manchester, 59km (36.8 miles) north of Sheffield and 316km (196 miles) north of London. Leeds achieved city status in 1893 and in 2020 was the fourth-largest urban area in the UK after London, Manchester and Birmingham in terms of population (Demographia). The city is well positioned in terms of transport links with good road and rail connections.
 
Connectivity:

Leeds is well served by motorways, being situated at the interchange of the M621 at junctions 1-6, the M1 at junction 43-45 and the M62 Trans Pennine route. It is also served by the regional road network where the primary routes of the A61, A660 and A64 radiate from the centre. The A660 also provides a route to the Yorkshire Dales National Park. Leeds Railway Station is the third busiest in the UK outside of London, serving close to 30 million passengers a year from 17 platforms (Network Rail). The planned construction of HS2, a high speed rail connection to London, is expected to complete in 2035-40 and will reduce travel time from Leeds to under 90 minutes and to Birmingham to 45 minutes. The £500m redevelopment of the new station campus and pedestrianisation of New Station Street directly fronting the station was completed in 2019, transforming and modernising this major northern travel hub.
 
Leeds Bradford Airport is situated approximately 13km (8 miles) north west of the city centre, providing both national and international flights. Plans to replace the current terminal with a new, state-of-the-art building were submitted to the Council at the start of 2020. If approved, this would make the airport one of the UK’s most environmentally efficient airport buildings and net-zero by 2023 (LBA).
 
Universities:

Leeds is an established University City and now home to five Universities:
  • The University of Leeds
  • Leeds Beckett University
  • Leeds Trinity University
  • Leeds Arts University
  • Leeds Conservatoire
 
Amenities:

The main retailing area of Leeds includes the recently completed Victoria Gate development, anchored by a flagship John Lewis, the indoor shopping centre Leeds Trinity and the historic Corn Exchange occupied by smaller independent shops. Leeds has quite a compact city centre which means that most amenities are within easy walking distance of each other.
 
Going out:

The city has an amazing student nightlife, and this is one of the biggest draws for students desiring a well-rounded university experience. Greek Street, the Northern and Arena Quarters and Merrion Street are popular areas for bars and restaurants.
 
Popular student bars:

  • Dry Dock
  • Mook
  • The Hyde Park Pub
  • The Sky Rack
  • Woodies Craft Ale House
  • the Brudenell Social Club
  • Tiger Tiger
  • The Alchemist
  • North Bar
  • Music Venues
  • Leeds Arena
  • O2 Academy Leeds
  • The Temple of Boom
 
Hotels:

As a popular city for tourists exploring the north of England and business visitors, Leeds also has a range of hotels, hostels, serviced and long stay apartments. Despite 2020s pandemic largely stalling all forms of tourism, Deloitte’s Leeds Crane Survey 2021 reported that construction started on the new Citispace Hotel on Regent Street, which will provide 54 hotel beds when completed. With life showing signs of returning to normal in the second half of 2021, tourists can find luxury accommodation in the city centre at hotels such as Dakota, Malmaison and the Marriott. Alternatively, serviced and long stay apartments are also plentiful, with Roomzzz, Quebecs and The Chambers aparthotels at various locations across Leeds offering accommodation for longer stays. Roomzzz has three locations in the city and is a hybrid aparthotel, long stay accommodation and regular hotel (the latter at its Swinegate location) for overnight accommodation in spacious flats and studios.
 
Sport:

Leeds United, Leeds Rhinos and Yorkshire Cricket Club are just a few of the sports teams that attract fans to the city, with Leeds United’s 2020 promotion to the Premier League providing the city with world-wide recognition. Leeds Beckett University is highly regarded for its sports facilities, coaching and teams, and range of sporting scholarships. More than 7,000 of its students take part in some form of sporting activity, with their Athletic Union hosting some 38 clubs and over 80 teams.
 
Economy and employment:

Leeds has one of the most diverse economies in the UK, with the highest private to public sector job ratio out of all the UK’s core cities. It is amongst the top five cities for job creation (Insider), offering a ratio of 1.02 jobs to a population aged 16-64, compared with a regional 0.81 average and a UK average of 0.87 (NOMIS). Leeds is the principle driver of a region with a £64.6 billion economy and a workforce of 1.37 million. Financial and business services account for 38% of the city’s total output, with other key sectors including retail, leisure and the visitor economy, construction, manufacturing and the creative and digital industries (Leeds.gov). Significant employers based in the city (those employing more than 1,000) include ASDA, First Direct, BT, Direct Line and Yorkshire Bank. Leeds also hosts the only subsidiary office of the Bank of England.


 

Employment (NOMIS, Oct 2019-Sept 2020)

Leeds

Yorkshire & The Humber

Great Britain

80.4%

74.6%

75.7%


Earnings:

Latest gross average earnings (by place of residence) for Leeds equate to £29,977 per year. This compares with £28,178 in Yorkshire and The Humber (-6.0%), and £30,613 across the rest of Great Britain (+2.12%).

Gross weekly pay (NOMIS, 2020)

Leeds

Yorkshire & The Humber

Great Britain

Earnings by place of residence

£574.90

£540.40

£587.10

Earnings by place of work

£573.00

£538.90

£586.70


Housing:

Average property prices in Leeds witnessed a 29.9% increase between December 2015 and December 2020; this is a significant rise, and actually above growth for all property types seen across England and Wales as a whole for the same period (23.0%). However, property in Leeds is still generally on average 20% cheaper than in the rest of England and Wales; it therefore offers excellent prospects for re-locations and much greater affordability that London and the south-east.
 
There is strong demand for detached properties, which has led to the largest increase in property prices for this house type at 32.6% growth between December 2015 and 2020. Flats have seen the smallest amount of growth in this period, although at a still healthy rate of 24.3%.

UK House Price Index (LEEDS)

Date

Detached

Semi-detached

Terraced

Flat

All property types

% change all types

Dec 2010

£251,673

£147,006

£114,969

£104,018

£140,645

N/A

Dec 2015

£290,275

£170,309

£132,370

£115,461

£161,551

14.9%

Dec 2020

£384,770

£224,191

£171,844

£143,552

£209,892

29.9%


UK House Price Index (ENGLAND)

Date

All property types

% change

Dec-10

£173,417

N/A

Dec-15

£215,023

24.0%

Dec-20

£264,446

23.0%

 
Education:

Leeds now benefits from five higher education providers, with a total full-time student population (postgraduate and undergraduate) of 60,560 during the 2019/20 academic year. The city has one of the largest student populations in Britain. The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2021 showed that The University of Leeds received 7.5 applications per place, Leeds Beckett 4, Leeds Trinity 5.9 and Leeds Arts 6.1. In fact, The University of Leeds was in the top three for volume of applications received in 2017, and in 2018 only Manchester attracted more applicants. The university also has a high international student proportion, with 23.5% coming from abroad in 2019/20.
 
Across the country, the number of applications for nursing degrees for the 2021/22 academic year increased by almost a third (LeedsLive). Leeds University is one of the foremost institutions for medical education, with students learning through Leeds General Infirmary, one of the country's leading teaching hospitals, and St James's University Hospital, a major centre for teaching and research (The Leeds Teaching Hospitals). The School of Dentistry is also one of the UK's prominent centres for study, with a worldwide reputation (University of Leeds).

Full-time undergraduate students 2019/20 (HESA)

 

2016/17

2017/18

2018/19

2019/20

The University of Leeds

23,890

25,045

25,810

25,570

Leeds Beckett University

16,920

16,185

15,770

15,895

Leeds Trinity University

2,825

2,700

2,665

4,175

Leeds Arts University

1,390

1,570

1,800

2,075

Leeds Conservatoire

N/A

N/A

1,150

1,255

Totals

45,025

45,500

47,195

48,970

Percentage change on previous year

N/A

+1.1%

+3.7%

+3.8%


Percentage international students (The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2021)

The University of Leeds

23.5%

Leeds Beckett University

5.9%

Leeds Trinity University

1.4%

Leeds Arts University

7.9%


Where students live:

Most first year students opt to start in university owned or purpose built blocks, where they can make the most of meeting other new students and making groups of friends. The trend tends then to find groups of four to ten students grouping together for their second year and rent a shared house or HMO (house in multiple occupation) for their second year. This is more like living at home as houses can come with gardens, parking and are usually more spacious and less institutional than living in a hall. In their final year – when students really have to stop partying put their head down and work – many choose studio flats, smaller groupings or to go back into halls.

Postgraduates are more likely to have self-contained one bed flats and studios in the city and these could be rented in the private market or form part of the offering in some purpose built student blocks.

There are pros and cons of shared house living compared to halls of residence. Pretty much all students experience both during their three or four years at university.

Purpose-built student accommodation:

The University of Leeds, Leeds Beckett and Leeds Trinity all guarantee university-owned student accommodation for first years, with Leeds Arts University and Leeds Conservatoire only being able to give priority. Student accommodation housing ranges from older style student halls to high-end luxury student accommodation, offering a range of options including en-suite rooms, one bed flats and even larger apartments suitable for couples. Blocks owned by Leeds University include Devonshire Hall, Henry Price, Charles Morris, Lupton, Oxley and North Hill Court. Private providers include Iconinc,Unite, Vita, iQ, CLV amongst many.


Purpose built student accommodation supply

Current supply19,625
Full time students
48,970
Under supply
29,345

Percentage international students (The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2021)

The University of Leeds
23.5%
Leeds Beckett University
5.9%
Leeds Trinity University
1.4%
Leeds Arts University
7.9%