Flood risk data for

Bolsover

Bolsover has an inland setting of small towns and open countryside and experiences cool, wet winters and warm summers, influenced by gentle slopes and river catchments. Flood risk is limited, though prolonged rainfall affects low-lying areas near the River Doe Lea and local drainage networks around settlements such as Shirebrook and Bolsover.

Bolsover has below-average flood exposure across its postcodes. 9.1% of postcodes contain at least one property in the high flood-risk band, based on Environment Agency NaFRA2 modelling (or SEPA / NRW for Scotland and Wales). The postcode band reflects the highest flood risk within that postcode - within any given high-band postcode, some individual properties may face little or no direct flood risk. Flood risk varies significantly between streets - two houses on the same road can carry different risk bands depending on their proximity to watercourses, drainage infrastructure, and elevation. The postcode checker on this page shows the exact band for any address in Bolsover.

Heat risk in Bolsover is moderate under current climate projections. Met Office UKCP18 data (50th percentile) suggests the area could see around 22 days above 25°C per year, averaged over the 2021-2040 period under the RCP8.5 high emissions scenario. These are probabilistic projections - the 50th percentile is the central estimate within RCP8.5; the full range of modelled outcomes is wide and lower emissions scenarios would produce lower figures. Higher summer temperatures affect comfort in properties without adequate ventilation, increase cooling energy costs, and can accelerate shrinkage in clay soils beneath foundations - making heat and subsidence risks linked for older housing stock built on clay-rich ground.

Air quality in Bolsover averages 7.3 µg/m³ for fine particulate matter (PM2.5), which is moderate by UK standards. PM2.5 comes primarily from road traffic, industry, and domestic burning. Exposure varies across the council area - postcodes near busy arterial roads or industrial zones typically record higher readings than suburban or rural addresses. Defra UK-AIR monitoring data underpins LocalRisk's air quality screening.

0.0% of postcodes in Bolsover sit on shrink-swell clay soils according to British Geological Survey (BGS) GeoSure data. These soils expand when wet and contract during dry summers, placing stress on foundations - particularly in properties built before cavity wall standards were tightened. High subsidence risk areas often see raised buildings insurance premiums and may require specialist structural surveys before purchase or remortgage.

LocalRisk draws on official UK open data sources for every postcode report: Environment Agency NaFRA2 / SEPA / NRW (flood risk - DfI Rivers data for Northern Ireland is not yet integrated), Met Office UKCP18 (heat projections, 50th percentile, 2021-2040 average under RCP8.5), Defra UK-AIR (air quality PM2.5), and British Geological Survey GeoSure (subsidence). Data is presented at postcode level so buyers, renters, landlords, and conveyancers can check exactly what applies to a specific address before making property decisions.