Census Data

Output Area at SU531038: Occupancy rating for rooms

Location Type: Output Areas, ONS Geographic Code: E00115780

added to comparison list.

Go to comparison

Key Facts

All Residents 225
Male 113
Female 112
Households 94
Population Density (people/km2) 41.9
Postcodes Covered

PO14 3EP
PO14 3ER
PO14 3ES
PO14 3ET
PO14 3EU
PO14 3EX
PO14 3QL
PO14 4EZ
PO14 4FD
PO14 4FU
PO14 4HA
PO14 4HB
PO14 4HD
PO14 4HE
PO14 4HF
PO14 4HG
PO14 4HH
PO14 4HJ
PO14 4HL
PO14 4HN
PO14 4HQ
PO14 4HW
PO14 4NS
PO14 4NT
PO14 4NU
PO14 4NX

Table Codets053
Issued2023-01-06
Unit of MeasureHousehold
Number of Response Options6

This dataset provides Census 2021 estimates that classify households in England and Wales by occupancy rating based on the number of rooms in the household. The estimates are as at Census Day, 21 March 2021.

Summary

Whether a household's accommodation is overcrowded, ideally occupied or under-occupied. This is calculated by comparing the number of rooms the household requires to the number of available rooms.

The number of rooms the household requires uses a formula which states that:

* one-person households require three rooms comprised of two common rooms and one bedroom
* two-or-more person households require a minimum of two common rooms and a bedroom for each person inline with the Bedroom Standard

People who should have their own room according to the Bedroom Standard are:

1. married or cohabiting couple
2. single parent
3. person aged 16 years and over
4. pair of same-sex persons aged 10 to 15 years
5. person aged 10 to 15 years paired with a person under 10 years of the same sex
6. pair of children aged under 10 years, regardless of their sex
7. person aged under 16 years who cannot share a bedroom with someone in 4, 5 or 6 above

An occupancy rating of:

* -1 or less implies that a household’s accommodation has fewer rooms than required (overcrowded)
* +1 or more implies that a household’s accommodation has more rooms than required (under-occupied)
* 0 suggests that a household’s accommodation has an ideal number of rooms

The number of rooms is taken from Valuation Office Agency (VOA) administrative data for the first time in 2021. The number of rooms is recorded at the address level, whilst the 2011 Census recorded the number of rooms at the household level. This means that for households that live in a shared dwelling, the available number of rooms are counted for the whole dwelling in VOA, and not each individual household.

VOA’s definition of a room does not include bathrooms, toilets, halls or landings, kitchens, conservatories or utility rooms. All other rooms, for example, living rooms, studies, bedrooms, separate dining rooms and rooms that can only be used for storage are included. Please note that the 2011 Census question included kitchens, conservatories and utility rooms while excluding rooms that can only be used for storage. To adjust for the definitional difference, the number of rooms required is deducted from the actual number of rooms it has available, and then 1 is added.

Quality Statement

It is inappropriate to measure change in number of rooms from 2011 to 2021, as Census 2021 used Valuation Office Agency data for this variable. Instead use Census 2021 estimates for number of bedrooms for comparisons over time.

More information at the ONS website

Occupancy rating for rooms: Total: All households 91
Occupancy rating of rooms: +2 or more 75
Occupancy rating of rooms: +1 9
Occupancy rating of rooms: 0 7
Occupancy rating of rooms: -1 0
Occupancy rating of rooms: -2 or less 0

Bar chart not showing properly? Data with large numbers of options really needs a wider screen. Try rotating your fondleslab into landscape mode and refreshing the page.

censusdata.uk is a Good Stuff website

18.117.187.113 Sat, 28 Sep 2024 16:34:25 +0100