Suburban Area CLIMATE RISK

Childwall climate risk: flood, heat, air quality and subsidence

Childwall sits inside the Liverpool council area, made up of residential streets and local-centre parades rather than its own town centre. LocalRisk has flood, heat, air and ground-stability data for 213 postcodes in Childwall; 12 samples are linked at the foot of this page.

9.4% of postcodes in Childwall fall into the Environment Agency's high-or-higher flood risk band - below the UK average of about 7%. A further 13.1% sit in the medium band; 77.5% are lower-risk. Across the wider Liverpool council area the figure is 11.8%, so Childwall runs lower than its parent council. Two postcodes a few streets apart can land in different bands; what drives the gap is elevation, distance to the nearest watercourse, and how the surrounding drainage performs in heavy rain. The postcode list at the foot of this page links to the full address-level reading for each postcode in Childwall.

Met Office UKCP18 projections estimate around 17 days above 25°C per year across the Liverpool area for the 2021-2040 period - the central scenario under high emissions; lower-emissions paths give lower numbers. Heat exposure within Childwall itself is uneven: top-floor flats, west-facing terraces and properties without through-ventilation hold heat well into the night, while ground-floor homes near tree cover or open ground cool faster. The headline 17-day figure is an area average, not a property-level reading.

Annual mean PM2.5 across the Liverpool area is 6.7 µg/m³ - above the World Health Organisation guideline of 5 µg/m³ and within the UK Environment Act 2021 target of 10 µg/m³ by 2040. Within Childwall, readings are not flat: postcodes within 200 metres of an A-road or major junction routinely run 30-50% higher during weekday rush hours than residential streets two roads back. Defra's UK-AIR network supplies the underlying figure.

Ground stability in Childwall follows the underlying geology more than the postal boundary. The British Geological Survey GeoSure dataset maps clay shrink-swell risk on a 50-metre cell, and properties on the same street can sit in different bands where a clay seam ends mid-road. Pre-1980 housing on clay-rich ground is the most exposed; properties on bedrock or well-drained sandy soils are typically lower-risk. A postcode-level check picks up that variation.

A free postcode check on LocalRisk covers all six hazards for any address in Childwall: Environment Agency flood mapping, BGS ground stability, Met Office heat projections, Defra PM2.5, plus coastal erosion and green-space access where relevant. The postcode list below opens an address-level report for each postcode in Childwall; the council link at the top of this page returns to the wider Liverpool picture.

Flood risk - postcodes in Childwall

9.4% High risk13.1% Medium risk77.5% Lower risk

EA NaFRA2 data. Postcode-level. Search below for your exact risk.