House Prices .io

Instant prices paid data for England and Wales

Latest house prices for Heywood

Details of 14,187 sales available for this area

Date Price Address
13/02/2026 Details... £410,000 8 Playfair Close, Heywood, OL10 2LD Details...
13/02/2026 Details... £110,000 4 Sandiway, Heywood, OL10 4BY Details...
06/02/2026 Details... £140,000 68 Starkey Street, Heywood, OL10 4JW Details...
06/02/2026 Details... £190,000 93 Abbey Crescent, Heywood, OL10 4UG Details...
04/02/2026 Details... £240,000 39 Avon Road, Heywood, OL10 4RW Details...
02/02/2026 Details... £295,000 2 Devonshire Close, Heywood, OL10 3LH Details...
30/01/2026 Details... £151,000 71 High Street, Heywood, OL10 3BU Details...
30/01/2026 Details... £106,500 13 Gorton Street, Heywood, OL10 4ED Details...
30/01/2026 Details... £100,000 32 Bury Street, Heywood, OL10 4QF Details...
23/01/2026 Details... £175,000 11 Victor Street, Heywood, OL10 2HL Details...
23/01/2026 Details... £483,000 22 Lenten Grove, Heywood, OL10 2LR Details...
23/01/2026 Details... £235,000 63 Trippear Way, Heywood, OL10 3FG Details...
23/01/2026 Details... £100,000 47 Bury Street, Heywood, OL10 3HH Details...
23/01/2026 Details... £100,000 147 Higher Lomax Lane, Heywood, OL10 4SJ Details...
20/01/2026 Details... £168,000 3 Farm Street, Heywood, OL10 2PR Details...
16/01/2026 Details... £160,000 143 Lewis Drive, Heywood, OL10 3NB Details...
09/01/2026 Details... £130,000 50 Rochdale Road East, Heywood, OL10 1QJ Details...
09/01/2026 Details... £173,000 26 Siddall Street, Heywood, OL10 2AS Details...
09/01/2026 Details... £165,000 4 Albert Street, Heywood, OL10 4QR Details...
09/01/2026 Details... £160,000 15 Higher Lomax Lane, Heywood, OL10 4RS Details...
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next

Known locally as the ‘Monkey Town’, Heywood sits in the Rochdale borough, characteristically positioned between the larger hubs of Bury and Rochdale. It is a town defined by its industrial bones, with rows of sturdy Victorian terraces and former textile mills that speak to its 19th-century boom. Geographically, it’s a practical spot; you’re right on the edge of the M66 and M62, making the commute into Manchester straightforward, yet the landscape begins to roll upward toward the Pennines just to the north. Queen’s Park provides a substantial green escape in the centre of town, featuring a lake and woodland walks that feel quite removed from the urban bustle. While the high street serves daily needs, it is the proximity to the East Lancashire Railway - a heritage line that still runs steam trains through the local station - that gives the area its most distinct piece of living history.