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Moving to Bath and after the honest version, not the brochure?
By Selina Burns, Customer Service Lead, Wigwam Self Storage Bath.
Selina has lived in Bath for eight years. She runs Wigwam Self Storage Bath and has helped over 1,200 Bath movers settle their things since 2022.
Last reviewed: June 2026 · 12 min read · For anyone moving to Bath, or thinking about it.
Moving to Bath usually means navigating Georgian terraces, the school catchment puzzle, parking permits, and tracking down the bits of the city that never make the brochure. I have lived in Bath for eight years and run Wigwam Bath for four of them. This is the relocator’s guide I would give a friend. Honest, specific, and yes, the storage piece is in here too, but only where it actually fits.
Bath gets written about in one of two ways: the tourist-board version (beautiful, timeless, effortlessly English) or the estate-agent version (aspirational, competitive, inevitably priced up). Neither is much use when you are trying to decide whether this is actually a good place to raise children or commute from on a wet Tuesday. So I am going to tell you what I tell anyone who asks.
There is a lot to love here. There are also a few things you will not find out until you have already moved. Let’s get those out of the way first.
The Bath Relocator’s Reality Check

Most people who move to Bath know it from a visit or two. That version of Bath is real, but it is not the whole picture. Here is the version that comes with a weekly shop and a school run.
Bath Is Smaller Than It Feels
Bath has a population of around 95,000. That makes it a large market town, not quite a small city, even if the architecture gives it a grander impression. The upside of that scale is genuine: almost everywhere you need is within a 15-minute walk of the centre. Appointments, the station, the good bakery, the park, the supermarket. You can run most of your life on foot, which is something that takes about a month to fully appreciate.
The downside is that Bath does not have the depth of a larger city. There is one main hospital. The restaurant scene is good but not enormous. You will cycle through the independent shops fairly quickly. Some people find the scale cosy; others find it limiting within a year or two. Worth knowing before you commit.
The Georgian-Terrace Surprise
The properties in Bath are genuinely beautiful. The Georgian terraces, the crescents, the wide stone staircases in the grander buildings. What the property portals do not always make plain is that the rooms themselves can be surprisingly small. High ceilings create a sense of volume that the floor plan does not always support. Narrow staircases mean that a standard three-seater sofa can become a removal-day problem. Listed-building status restricts what you can change without consent, which affects everything from the colour of your front door to whether you can fit a modern boiler neatly.
None of this is a reason not to move here. It is a reason to measure your furniture before exchange day and to budget a little time for the things you assumed would be straightforward and are not.
Tourism: The Locals’ Bath Versus Visitors’ Bath
Bath draws around six million visitors a year. From roughly May through September, the high street, Pulteney Bridge, and the area around the Roman Baths can feel like a theme park. If you are arriving from a quiet market town, the summer foot traffic takes some adjusting to.
The thing is, locals mostly do not go to those places on a Saturday afternoon in August. There is a parallel Bath, the one on the residential side streets, the Saturday farmers’ market, the canal towpath, the pubs that do not have menus in five languages. You find your way to it gradually. Most movers feel the shift at some point in their first year, a walk they take without thinking, a route they know. That version of Bath is genuinely excellent to live in.
Areas Of Bath: Where Actually To Live

Bath is compact enough that the area you choose shapes your daily life more than in a larger city. The difference between Lansdown and Bear Flat is real. Here is an honest breakdown.
Central Bath: Walcot, Pulteney, The Flat Bits
The centre gives you maximum walkability. Everything is close. The station is close. The cafes, the independent shops, the weekly market. If you do not have a car and are not going to need one, central Bath is close to ideal for a professional couple without children.
The trade-offs are real, though. Central property tends to command a premium. Tourist traffic is a genuine part of daily life in summer. On-street parking is either permit-controlled or metered. If you have a car and need to use it regularly, the centre is a friction point rather than an advantage. Right for professionals who live by foot and do not mind paying for the privilege.
Upper Town: Lansdown And Camden
Lansdown and the Camden side of Bath offer Georgian character with considerably less tourist pressure. The streets are quieter. The architecture is, if anything, even more striking. Some of the most sought-after state primary catchment areas sit in this part of the city, which is one reason families with children look here first.
The honest caveat: there is a hill. A real one. Walking up to Lansdown from the centre is not a casual stroll and cycling it requires a level of commitment some people discover they do not have in their first week. That said, for families who want character, quiet streets, and proximity to good schools, this part of Bath is hard to beat.
Outer Areas: Bear Flat, Combe Down, Oldfield Park
These three areas represent the more affordable end of Bath within the city boundary, and each has its own distinct feel. Bear Flat has a village-within-a-city quality, with a high street of independent shops and a community that looks out for itself. Combe Down sits on higher ground and has a slightly more suburban character, better parking, and a noticeably quieter pace. Oldfield Park is the most affordable of the three, popular with younger professionals and growing families, with good bus links and its own neighbourhood rhythm.
If you want to be within Bath without paying central Bath prices, and particularly if you have children or need to park a car somewhere sensible, these three areas are worth spending time in before you make any offers.
Outside The City: Saltford, Keynsham, Bathampton
Some of the best value within commuting reach of Bath is in the villages to the east and west. Saltford and Keynsham both sit on the Bristol to Bath railway line. Keynsham is larger, with its own town centre and schools. Saltford is smaller and very pretty. Both give you a genuinely different quality of life, more space, better parking, green surroundings, at significantly lower prices than equivalent Bath city properties.
Bathampton is closer in, just outside the city boundary, with canal walking on your doorstep and a genuine village feel. The trade-off across all three is that you are living a village life, not a city one. That is exactly what some people want, and entirely the wrong choice for others. Be honest with yourself about which you are before you commit.
Schools In Bath: The Catchment Puzzle

The most important thing I can tell any family moving to Bath with children is this: the postcode you choose determines the school your child can realistically attend, often more than the school’s reputation does. Sort the catchment before you finalise the street.
State Primary Catchments
Bath and North East Somerset Council (BANES) operates the local authority admissions process for state primaries in the area. The most popular primaries have tight catchment areas that can shift year to year depending on demand and sibling places. A road that sat inside a catchment last year may not be inside it this year.
The single most practical thing you can do is check the BANES admissions website before you exchange. Not before you make an offer. Before you exchange. Some streets that look close to a well-regarded school are outside its catchment by a distance that looks trivial on a map and is anything but on admissions day. This is not a criticism of the system; it is just how it works, and knowing it early saves real distress later.
State Secondaries
The secondary picture in Bath is broadly positive. Beechen Cliff (boys), Hayesfield (girls), and Ralph Allen (mixed) are the three most discussed secondaries in the city. All are well-regarded, all oversubscribed to varying degrees, and all subject to the same catchment reality as the primaries. Reputation will not get your child a place; the postcode will.
Worth knowing: if you are moving from an area where secondary school choice felt more open, the Bath secondary picture can feel more constrained. That is not unique to Bath, but the geographic compactness of the city means catchments are genuinely tight.
Independent Options
Bath has a long-established independent school sector. King Edward’s (boys, with sixth-form provision), Royal High (girls), and Kingswood are the names that come up most often. Fees are substantial across all three. Bursary provision varies, and the availability of means-tested support is worth investigating directly with each school’s admissions office.
None of this is an endorsement of any particular school. The landscape here is for orientation only. Visit open days. Ask each school directly about admissions and financial support. Do not rely on what you have read or heard second-hand, including here.
Practical Bits: Parking, Transport, And The Broadband Surprise

These are the things that do not come up until you are already living here, so I will tell you now.
Resident Parking Permits
Bath’s permit zone system covers most of the central and inner residential areas. If you are renting or buying in any street within a mile or so of the centre, you will almost certainly be in a permit zone. Annual resident permits are not prohibitively expensive, but the important thing to understand is that some streets in more central zones have waiting lists for permits. That means you can move in and spend weeks relying on short-stay car parks while your permit processes.
Budget for this as a known cost rather than a surprise, and confirm the permit situation on any specific street before you commit. Your solicitor or the council’s parking team can tell you the zone status.
Bath Spa Station And Onward Links
Bath Spa has good direct rail links. GWR services to London Paddington typically run around one hour and twenty minutes. Bristol Temple Meads is under twenty minutes, which makes Bristol’s job market and airport genuinely accessible. There are services toward Cardiff and the west too.
The station sits comfortably within walking distance of most central areas. If you are commuting to London regularly, Bath is one of the more bearable places to do it from.
Cycling And Walking
The centre of Bath is walkable in a way that few comparably-sized towns are. Most daily errands, most social engagements, most of what you need, can be done on foot without much thought. Walking is genuinely the best way to navigate the central areas.
Cycling is more complicated. Bath is hilly in a way that catches people out. The canal towpath and the two-rivers cycle network are excellent for leisure and for gentler commutes into the centre from the flat approach. Cycling from Lansdown or Combe Down into town on a weekday morning is a different matter, and requires either good fitness or an e-bike. Be realistic about which one you have before you count cycling as part of your commute plan.
Broadband And Listed Buildings
This one trips up people regularly. Some of Bath’s older properties, particularly those with listed status, have restrictions on running physical fibre infrastructure into or through the building. This is a manageable problem in most cases, but it can mean a longer installation timeline, additional permissions, or a different technical solution than you expected.
The practical advice: before you exchange on any older Bath property, confirm with your preferred broadband provider what is actually possible at that address. Do not assume that because full-fibre is available nearby it is available to that specific building. Find out first. The answer is usually fine, but occasionally it is not, and better to know before you are trying to work from home on a moving-day connection.
The Best Of Bath, The Locals’ Version

These are not the things on the tourism website. These are the things you find out through living here, or through someone telling you. Consider this the shortcut.
Three Pubs Worth Knowing
The Raven on Queen Street is the first one I tell people about. It is warm, unpretentious, and consistently good. No bells and whistles. The Star Inn on Vineyards is a proper old pub, one of the few remaining tied houses in the country, and drinks are served without ceremony in the way they should be. The Garrick’s Head on St John’s Place, beside the Theatre Royal, is the one I would take a visiting friend to without hesitation. Real atmosphere without performing it.
These are three genuine recommendations, not a list assembled from a review site. Verify that they match your own taste when you get here.
Markets And Food Worth Knowing
The Bath Farmers’ Market at Green Park Station runs on Saturday mornings and is one of the better ones in the South West. It is not enormous, but the quality is consistently high and it has the kind of character that makes a Saturday morning in a new city feel like home faster than almost anything else. Worth making a habit of from week one.
There are a handful of independent food shops and delicatessens in the centre that reward knowing about them. The specifics change over time, so I will not list them here in a way that dates, but if you enjoy cooking, take a Saturday morning in your first month and walk the streets between the market and Walcot Street. You will find them.
Outdoor Spaces That Are Not Royal Crescent
Henrietta Park, on the Bathwick side of the river, is the locals’ park. Quieter than the parks on the tourist route, properly green, and easy to reach from the centre on foot. Sydney Gardens, behind the Holburne Museum, has the feel of a secret, despite being entirely public. Alexandra Park, up on Beechen Cliff, has the best view of the city there is. Go on a clear morning and you will understand immediately why people stay here.
Weekend Walks Within Twenty Minutes Of The Centre
The Skyline Walk is the one I recommend to every new arrival. It circuits the hills above Bath and gives you the whole city from above. You will feel proprietary about it within the first time you have done it, which is exactly the right feeling. The walk from Bath to Bathampton along the canal is the easier, flatter option, good for families, good for any day when you want pleasant without effort. Both are on your doorstep from the moment you move in.
When You Will Actually Need Short-Term Storage

Most Bath movers do not plan to need storage. In four years of helping people through Bath moves, I can tell you that most of them end up needing it anyway. Here is why.
Chain Delays
Property chains in Bath move slowly, and they collapse more often than most buyers expect. The gap between where you are leaving and where you are arriving can open up at very short notice. You need somewhere for your things to go while the chain sorts itself out, and you need the flexibility to leave when it resolves, not when a fixed contract says you can.
Wigwam Bath has a two-week minimum stay. If your chain resolves faster than expected and you are ready to move into your new place, any unused days are refunded once you have vacated and settled the account, provided you have given 14 days’ notice. That is not a generous marketing line; it is the practical policy that makes short-term storage work for movers. You can see the full details in our terms and conditions.
Renovation At The New Place
The majority of Bath buyers do some work before they move in. Even if it is only redecorating, the combination of paint, tradespeople, and your furniture in the same rooms does not work. A few weeks in storage gives you a clear site to work with and protects your things while the dust settles. We see this regularly. It tends to shorten the renovation timeline because you are not working around boxes.
If you want a clear site to work with and protection for your things while the dust settles, it is worth a conversation before your move date.
Downsizing Into A Smaller Bath Property
Moving from a larger family home in the Cotswolds, Somerset, or Wiltshire into a Bath flat or smaller terrace is a very specific kind of move. The emotional dimension is real, particularly if you are selling the family home. The practical dimension is that the new property will not hold everything at once, and that is normal. It is not a planning failure.
Storage gives you time to make decisions about what comes with you and what finds a new home, without making all of those decisions on moving day when you have neither the time nor the energy. That breathing room tends to make the decisions better and the move less pressured.
The Georgian-Terrace Overflow
Bath’s housing stock is beautiful and frequently short on storage space. There are no utility rooms in most Georgian terraces. Loft access is often limited or restricted. The rooms that photographed beautifully on the portal are smaller in person, and the narrow staircase means some pieces of furniture do not make it past the front door.
None of this is a personal failing. It is the architectural character of the city. Storage at Wigwam Bath is three or four minutes from most of central Bath, which makes it genuinely practical as an extension of a flat or terrace that cannot quite hold everything. All customers are required to have contents cover for their goods while in storage. You can take Wigwam’s policy or prove your own. The details are on our contents protection page.
If any of those situations sounds like where you are heading, a quick conversation with the Wigwam Bath team costs nothing. Get a quote at quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk and we can work out what you need.
Wigwam Self Storage Bath: Where We Are And How It Works

Wigwam Self Storage Bath is at 4 York Place, London Road, Bath, BA1 6AE. That puts us about a four-minute drive or a twelve-minute walk from Bath Spa station, and well within reach of all the central and inner residential areas.
Location, Parking, And Access
There is free customer parking on site. Access is via smart entry, available 6am to 10pm, seven days a week. Our sites are unmanned. Customers access their own units directly. If you are expecting a delivery, someone from your side needs to be present to receive it; we do not sign for or handle goods on customers’ behalf.
Sizes And What They Suit
We have units from small (a few boxes and a bicycle) through to large (contents of a three or four bedroom house). The right size depends entirely on your specific situation, which is why we do not quote a generic size online without understanding what you are working with. Prices vary by size and duration; the full picture is on our pricing page.
The two-week minimum applies. If you leave early after giving 14 days’ notice, once you have vacated and settled the account, any unused days are refunded. A refundable deposit is taken at the start; it is returned after the notice period once you have vacated and the account is clear of anything owed.
What People Say About Wigwam Bath
We have a 4.9-star rating from 77 Google reviews at time of writing. A number of those reviews mention the team by name, which is the kind of feedback I am most proud of. Customers are not just rating the facility; they are noting that someone helped them think through a difficult move. That is what we are here for.
We are part of Wigwam’s network of UK market-town locations. Bath is one location among many, but each location has a local team who know their town. That is the point.
Get In Touch, Or Just Have The Conversation
Moving to Bath is one of the better decisions you can make. It involves a lot of small puzzles, and some of them you will not see coming until you are mid-move. That is entirely normal, and it is nothing the Wigwam Bath team has not seen before.
If storage is part of what you need, we can help you work out what size, how long, and whether it actually makes sense for your situation. If it is not what you need, we will tell you that. We have been helping Bath movers since 2022, and the most common piece of feedback I get is that the conversation was more useful than expected.
Here is what Wigwam Bath offers:
- Central Bath location, London Road, easy to reach from every part of the city
- Smart entry 6am to 10pm, seven days
- Two-week minimum stay, unused days refunded on early departure with 14-day notice
- Refundable deposit, returned after you vacate and settle the account
- Named local team, not a call centre
- 4.9 stars from 77 Bath customers
Get a Wigwam Bath quote: quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk
See the Bath location page: Wigwam Self Storage Bath
Welcome to Bath. When you get here, you know where we are.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I park a removal van or large vehicle near the Wigwam Bath site to load and unload?
Yes, there is free customer parking on site at our York Place location, which makes loading and unloading straightforward in a city where parking is otherwise a genuine headache. That on-site parking is one of the practical advantages of using us during a Bath move, because finding space for a removal van anywhere central in Bath is famously difficult, with permit zones, narrow streets and tourist traffic all working against you.
A couple of things worth planning for. If you are bringing a large removal lorry rather than a transit van, it is worth a quick call to the team beforehand to talk through access and the best approach, since the London Road area carries traffic and you will want to time your arrival sensibly. Within our access hours of 6am to 10pm, an early start often means a clearer run into the site before the day’s traffic builds, which is exactly why that 6am option exists.
Remember the sites are unmanned, so when your removal firm arrives, someone from your side needs to be present to direct them and access the unit by smart entry. We do not have staff to receive goods or sign anything on your behalf. For most Bath moves this is simple: you or a family member meets the van, lets everyone in, and the on-site parking takes the usual Bath parking stress out of the equation. If you are coordinating a tight schedule, the team can talk you through timing when you book.
Is a ground-floor unit available, given how many Bath properties have those narrow staircases?
It is worth asking the team directly about ground-floor units and how units are accessed, because the Bath property quirk you have read about, narrow Georgian staircases and rooms that are smaller than they photograph, often means people arrive with furniture that was a struggle to get out and want it to be easy to get in. Access arrangements vary, so the honest answer is to describe what you are storing when you get a quote and let the team advise on the most practical unit for it.
This connects to a point worth making for Bath movers specifically. If a piece of furniture barely made it down your terrace staircase, think about whether it should go into storage assembled or whether disassembling it first will make both the move and any future retrieval far easier. Beds, wardrobes and large tables that come apart are much simpler to handle, take up less space, and are less likely to be damaged in transit through tight doorways.
When you request a quote at quote.wigwamstorage.co.uk, tell the team about any particularly large or awkward items, especially if you are moving from or into a listed property with restricted access. They can then recommend a unit and an access route that suits, rather than you discovering a problem on the day. The team knows Bath’s housing stock well, so this is exactly the kind of local detail they can help with before you commit.
My Bath move is delayed and I’ve already booked a unit. Can I change my start date?
Yes, contact the Wigwam Bath team as soon as your dates shift and they will work with you, because chain delays are completely routine in Bath and the team handles them constantly. As this article notes, Bath chains move slowly and collapse more often than buyers expect, so a moving date sliding by a week or two is something the team has helped people through many times. They would much rather you tell them early than worry about it.
The terms are built to absorb exactly this kind of uncertainty. The two-week minimum is short enough that you are not committing to a long block of time you may not need, and if your move ultimately completes faster than expected, unused days are refunded once you have vacated and settled the account, provided you have given 14 days notice. So a delay at one end or a quick finish at the other does not leave you trapped or out of pocket.
The practical step is simply communication: as soon as you know your start date has moved, call the team and they will adjust the plan with you. Because this is a local team rather than a call centre, you are talking to people who understand how a Bath move actually unfolds. For the full detail on notice, the deposit and refunds, see the terms and conditions. The short version: dates moving is normal, the team expects it, and the terms flex around it.
I’m moving to one of the villages like Saltford or Keynsham, not Bath itself. Is the Bath site still convenient?
For most of the villages within commuting reach of Bath, the York Place site is genuinely convenient, but the right answer depends on exactly where you are landing. Saltford, Keynsham and Bathampton all sit close enough to Bath that the London Road site is a reasonable drive, and with free on-site parking and access from 6am to 10pm seven days a week, fitting a storage trip around a commute or a settling-in week is straightforward.
The honest way to decide is to think about where you will actually be travelling from and how often you expect to visit the unit during your move. If you are bridging a gap and will mostly load once and collect once, a few extra minutes drive barely matters. If you expect to dip in and out frequently while you sort a downsizing move, you might weigh the distance more carefully.
It is also worth checking the wider network, because we have 15 market-town locations across the UK and another site may sit closer to a particular village depending on which direction you are coming from. The locations hub lets you search by town or postcode to see what is nearest. For Saltford, Keynsham and Bathampton specifically, Bath is usually the natural choice, but a quick look at the locations page confirms it for your exact spot. If in doubt, the team can advise when you get a quote.
Do you offer climate-controlled storage for antiques or artwork from a period Bath property?
No, we do not offer climate-controlled storage, and we would rather tell you that plainly than let you store something unsuitable. Our units are clean, dry and secure, individually alarmed, and that is the honest description of the environment. For the overwhelming majority of what comes out of a Bath property during a move, furniture, boxes, clothing, kitchen equipment, ordinary household contents, clean, dry and secure is exactly the right standard and nothing more is needed.
Where it matters is the genuinely specialist item. If you are moving from a period property and have something that truly needs regulated temperature or humidity, certain antiques, original artworks, fine instruments, archive-quality documents, a standard unit is not the right home for it, and a specialist climate-controlled facility is. A useful rule of thumb: if you would happily keep it in a clean, dry room at normal household temperature, our units suit it. If it is more delicate than that, it belongs somewhere specialist.
This honesty also has an insurance dimension worth knowing. Contents cover is mandatory, and the RSA policy excludes damage caused by atmospheric or climatic conditions, which is another reason genuinely climate-sensitive items belong in specialist storage rather than a standard unit. If you are unsure about a specific piece, describe it to the team when you get a quote and they will tell you honestly whether a standard unit is appropriate. We will not pretend our units are something they are not just to win the business.
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