High Salvington is the hilltop village above Salvington — quiet, leafy, with the South Downs Way on its doorstep and panoramic views across Worthing to the sea. Predominantly larger family homes on generous plots.
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Get a valuationHigh Salvington is the village at the top of the slope north of Worthing, distinct from Salvington proper by altitude and feel — substantially quieter, leafier, with bigger plots and the kind of view that justifies the climb. The 18th-century High Salvington Windmill (still operational, weekends only) is the area's landmark; the South Downs Way runs along the ridge directly above.
Housing is mostly larger 1930s and post-war detacheds and bungalows on substantial plots — quarter-acre gardens are not unusual. A handful of older flint cottages around the windmill survive from the village's farming days. New builds are scarce; the area is mostly protected by its position within the South Downs National Park boundary.
“The views across to the Isle of Wight on a clear day are genuinely spectacular.”
A snapshot from the properties we have comparable data on in High Salvington. Median monthly rent and the typical range for each size of property.
No train station — Durrington-on-Sea is 10 minutes by car, Worthing 15 minutes. The A24 runs along the eastern edge for the London road north. Bus service is sparse and infrequent; this is a car-first neighbourhood.
Springfield Junior and Maybridge Junior are the closest state primaries. Secondary catchment runs to Worthing High School or Durrington High School.
Families and downsizers who want substantial space, real gardens, walking access to the Downs, and don't mind driving for everything else. Quietest of the north Worthing neighbourhoods, the most expensive per square foot, and the slowest to come onto the market — properties that come up here tend to be well-fought-over. The views across to the Isle of Wight on a clear day are genuinely spectacular.
Live rents, days-to-let, availability and yields for High Salvington — compiled from comparable properties let through Phillip James and public listings data.
Compiled from comparable lets · updated June 2026
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Ask the teamBased on rental and let-agreed transactions and active listings in this area, calculated by Phillip James — Independent Letting Agents across the Sussex coast since 2008, combined with public listings data.
Based on rental and let-agreed transactions and active listings in this area, calculated by Phillip James — Independent Letting Agents across the Sussex coast since 2008, combined with public listings data.
Based on rental and let-agreed transactions and active listings in this area, calculated by Phillip James — Independent Letting Agents across the Sussex coast since 2008, combined with public listings data.
Based on rental and let-agreed transactions and active listings in this area, calculated by Phillip James — Independent Letting Agents across the Sussex coast since 2008, combined with public listings data.
Based on rental and let-agreed transactions and active listings in this area, calculated by Phillip James — Independent Letting Agents across the Sussex coast since 2008, combined with public listings data.

Durrington is Worthing's northern edge — a largely 1930s-onwards family neighbourhood between the South Downs and the A27, with good schools, a station, and easier-to-afford housing than the seafront.
Salvington is north Worthing's hillside neighbourhood — interwar and post-war housing climbing toward the Downs, with the A27 at the southern edge and the South Downs Way starting just to the north.
The Thomas à Becket neighbourhood is the residential pocket west of central Worthing built around the Thomas à Becket Junior and Infant Schools — 1930s family streets, very strong primary catchment, and one of the most popular family-rental addresses in the town.
Broadwater sits just north of central Worthing — a big, settled village core wrapped in family streets, with a green at its heart and some of the most-requested primary schools in town.
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