Residents have been driven out of one of England's most stunning villages as holidaymakers have completely taken over.


Throughout the summer period, Blakeney in North Norfolkbecomes exceptionally hectic. This Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty attracts massive crowds, who arrive to admire its delightful stone dwellings, a hotel hailed as the country's best, and large seal colonies.


Yet winter paints a completely different picture. Visitor numbers plummet drastically and many old fishing properties stand empty. The settlement's charm was instantly obvious to me during my late November visit. Just a stone's throw from the celebrated Manor Coastal Hotel and Inn flows the River Glaven, winding through the National Nature Reserve.


Blakeney Point has earned fame for its seal communities, with Beans Boat offering guided trips throughout the year. Back in the 1800s, this seaside community was positioned much nearer to the shore than it is today.


Across the past century, the estuary has slowly filled with silt, matching the region's fishing trade downturn, now allowing only the smallest boats to reach the harbour.



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What operated as a fishing village has evolved into a holiday hotspot. During summer, Blakeney's two pubs and three hotels run at maximum occupancy.


"I love living here, but unfortunately, during the summer, it is just a full, full village. There's far too much traffic going through such a small place, but that does mean I'm busy with my work, which is fantastic. The cottages and second homes are so quiet during the winter. It's sad to know that there are so many people who'd love to live in those houses, but unfortunately, they can't live in them permanently. They're sitting there empty during the winter, and then it's so, so busy during the summer. It's a tricky one for me, as working in the tourist industry, I need it to be busy. But to see the small village that's very quaint and dainty overrun with people, yeah, it's a lot," Tore continued.


Tore is among the handful of Blakeney-born residents who haven't inherited property yet still call the village home. She moved back to the area ten years ago after a whirlwind romance in Libya.


Her local connections made her eligible to sign up with the Blakeney Neighbourhood Housing Society, which caters to the community of 400 properties. The Society's website explains its purpose: "The price of housing has risen steeply as many properties have become second homes or places to retire to, and many local people can no longer afford to buy or rent them. The purpose of the Blakeney Neighbourhood Housing Society, founded 1946, is to provide affordable housing for local people. It owns 39 houses and cottages in Blakeney or neighbouring villages and they are all let at affordable rents to tenants with a local birth tie."


Five decades back, an enormous proportion of UK citizens found themselves in Tore's predicament, with 30% of the entire population living in some type of social housing. Yet, following years of Right to Buy schemes and sluggish building rates, this percentage has been cut in half.I



Tore explained: "I started working at the hotel at 14, and lived in the area my whole life. Working in a hotel and in the trade that it is all around here, the chances of buying a house would just be impossible. I was lucky enough to be signed up to Blakeney Housing Society in 2017, and then moved in in 2019,


"It has changed my whole life. It means I can be around my whole family. A lot of my friends who were born and bred here couldn't live here due to housing problems, so they moved away to somewhere cheaper. But it is the perfect place to live. There's community spirit, it's a very olde-worlde place. I'd never want to be anywhere else but here."


The figures paint a stark picture of the situation facing the area. Blakeney properties fetched an average of £714,000 in November 2025, according to OnTheMarket – treble the UK average of £273,000.


Office for National Statistics figures reveal the median weekly wage in North Norfolk sits at £571.


Thanks to her controlled rent arrangement, Tore shells out just £478 each month for her family home.


Concerned by the yawning gap between typical salaries and house prices, the district council stepped in earlier this year. It unveiled an extra 100% levy on Council Tax bills for second home owners, leaseholders or tenants in North Norfolk, essentially doubling what they must pay for their extra property.


Blakeney Parish Council chairman Rosemary Thew stressed the measure isn't designed to put off visitors, noting tourism represents a "big part of the village economy". However, she conceded the abundance of second and holiday properties in the area posed a major worry.


"The volume of second homes is very high, around half. It's pushing prices up quite considerably. It means that, as far as locals are concerned, they can't afford to live here. It's a lovely place to live but you've got people [taking up dwellings] who are not key workers. A lot are retired people or second home owners. In winter time, it's [the impact] particularly marked. The streets are jet black because there are no lights on in houses," she told Mail Online.

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