Enfield reads as a borough around the England average for deprivation and with Band D council tax among the lowest Truely covers.
Direction of travel — Band D council tax has risen about 4.3% a year since 1993 (298% in total).
Urban personality zones
The kinds of neighbourhood inside this borough
Each zone is a cluster of postcodes that behave alike across affluence, density, crime, schools, broadband and green space — the editorial character types the map is coloured by. Ordered by how much of the borough they make up.
Keep exploring
Facts, and the fabric
This page is the intelligence layer — how the borough behaves internally. For the executive briefing — council tax, schools, crime, deprivation and the postcodes we cover — see the borough report.
Who thrives here
Who tends to do well in Enfield
A read of who Enfield's borough-wide signal profile tends to suit — derived from its official averages, not a survey of who lives here. Signals to weigh, not advice; every postcode varies, so check the area you're actually considering.
The data points to low council-tax overheads, a lower-cost profile with room to move.
Boroughs like Enfield
The closest matches to Enfield's overall signal profile — deprivation, council tax, air quality, broadband and green-space access, each ranked against England. Every match opens its own neighbourhood-fabric map.
Neighbourhood fabric is Truely's map of how Enfield varies block by block. Rather than a single borough-wide average, every covered postcode in Enfield is placed on a common scale across council tax, deprivation, crime density, school distance, broadband availability and green-space access, then grouped into character clusters and plotted. All figures come from official UK government data under the Open Government Licence v3.0 — MHCLG, Ofsted, police.uk, Environment Agency, DEFRA, Ofcom and Ordnance Survey — with no estimates dressed as fact and no opaque scoring. For Enfield's headline figures and the postcodes we cover, see the Enfield borough report.