Street spotlight

Regent Street in Old North London, from Western edge to Adelaide

Regent is one of the strongest street names in Old North, but the useful read is still block-specific. The western edge, the interior blocks, and the Adelaide side all create different buyer expectations.

Streets Real Estate
Regent Street Old North market-adjusted value context map
Market-adjusted value context is broad street and block context, not an appraisal or exact home value.
$707k Street value context

Broad April 2026 context, not an appraisal.

81.4% Owner context

Census-derived local ownership context.

65.7% Detached-house signal

Public housing-form context along this street.

#4 Old North street rank

Strong Street Quality in the current street read.

Regent deserves its reputation, but the best read is still block by block.

Quick read

  • Regent ranks as one of Old North's strongest street-quality reads in the current data.
  • The Richmond-to-Waterloo section shows the highest broad value context.
  • The Waterloo-to-Maitland interior blocks carry the clearest owner-occupied residential feel.
  • The Western/Richmond and Adelaide edges need more explanation in a listing.

Block read

Where Regent Street changes inside Old North

Each block card is context only. It is meant to help compare sections of the street, not price a specific house.

1

85-220

Western edge to Richmond St

Strong name and setting, with more edge exposure than the interior blocks.

Value context
$724k
Owner context
79.6%
Detached signal
55.0%
2

253-320

Richmond St to Waterloo St

The highest broad value-context section, with convenience and strong address recognition.

Value context
$776k
Owner context
80.0%
Detached signal
61.1%
3

375-405

Waterloo St to Colborne St

A strong interior Old North section with a clean owner-occupied signal.

Value context
$711k
Owner context
93.5%
Detached signal
84.0%
4

404-454

Colborne St to Maitland St

Still a strong residential read, helped by the Colborne and Maitland grid.

Value context
$685k
Owner context
90.7%
Detached signal
84.0%
5

465-601

Maitland St to Adelaide edge

Residential, but less insulated because the Adelaide edge is close.

Value context
$630k
Owner context
75.0%
Detached signal
71.0%

How Regent reads inside Old North

Regent is one of the streets that helps explain why Old North has a premium at all. It has scale, mature residential form, and a strong owner-occupied signal across much of the street.

That does not mean the whole street feels the same. The western side is closer to the Western and Richmond edge. The eastern side gets closer to Adelaide. The strongest homeowner read is usually in the interior, where the street feels more protected from the busier edges.

Where the street changes

The Richmond-to-Waterloo section has the highest broad market-adjusted value context on Regent. It has convenience and a strong address read, but it is not as tucked away as the interior sections.

Waterloo to Colborne and Colborne to Maitland are the cleaner residential reads. They show stronger owner-occupied and detached-home signals. East of Maitland, the Adelaide side remains residential, but the edge effect lowers the sense of insulation.

What sellers should understand

A Regent seller can usually lead with confidence, but the listing still needs to explain the block. If the house is in the interior stretch, the quiet residential setting should be part of the story. If it is near Richmond, Western, or Adelaide, the listing should get ahead of traffic, parking, and edge questions.

Regent's data is strong: high low-density residential share, low major-repair signal, and a broad market-adjusted value context around $707,000 as of April 2026. The practical move is not to overstate the street. It is to show exactly why this block deserves the Regent premium.

How the numbers should be read

The Old North portion of Regent has about 190 address records, with roughly 188 residential records. It is a strong street-quality read, but the block spread still matters.

The value figures here are market-adjusted context, not appraisals. They combine local dwelling-value context with public London/St. Thomas HPI movement. The point is to compare sections of the street, not to price an individual house from a web page.