Dean Road, Godalming | £800k
There are houses you drive past and immediately want to know more about. Number 7 Dean Road is one of them: a Victorian detached home with a sage green door, original tiled entrance and the kind of character that reveals itself gradually.
Details
Bedrooms: 3Bathrooms: 2
Receptions: 2
Square Feet: 1119
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The entrance hall sets the tone straight away, with wide oak boards continuing from the original monochrome tiled porch and a sense of arrival that newer houses simply can't create. To the left, the sitting room is the kind of space that gets properly used: a bay window fitted with plantation shutters draws in generous light from the front, while an original cast iron fireplace, deep cornicing and a pair of lacquered red column radiators give it a warmth and personality all of its own.
Beyond, a second reception room, roughly the same size, offers real flexibility. Currently a playroom, it works just as well as a proper dining room, or a home office, with a brick fireplace, fitted pine cabinetry and the same oak flooring throughout.
The kitchen and breakfast room runs across the full rear of the house and is easily the biggest room on the ground floor. At nearly sixteen feet, there's room for both the kitchen itself and a proper family dining table. There is a skylight above and an original leaded glass door through to the utility room. A shower room completes the ground floor.
Upstairs, the landing leads to three bedrooms. The main bedroom is a generous double, nearly fifteen feet long, with generous space around the bed. A family bathroom serves the upper floor, with a second shower and bath.
The rear garden is enclosed and private, with a stone paved terrace straight off the back of the house that earns its keep through the warmer months. A generous lawn extends beyond, edged by established planted borders full of colour through spring and summer, with a versatile timber outbuilding at the far end, with electricity.
Dean Road sits comfortably within reach of Godalming's town centre, with the High Street, Memorial Park, and both Godalming and Farncombe stations all a short walk or cycle away.
Location Guide
Dean Road sits within one of the quieter residential pockets of Godalming, close enough to the town centre to arrive on foot, yet surrounded by woodland and minutes from the river.
Transport Links
A ten minute walk from Dean Road is Godalming Station, with fast trains to London Waterloo running regularly throughout the day, covering the journey in around forty minutes, making this a practical base for anyone with ties to the capital. Farncombe station is also within easy reach on foot and provides an alternative set of services for those who prefer a slightly different timetable. For those who drive, the A3 is under ten minutes in the car. Buses to Guildford and Farnham run from the end of the road.
Education
Godalming's school offer is one of the area's strengths and a significant draw for families. Moss Lane Infant School is among the closest to Dean Road, with Godalming Junior and Busbridge Junior schools serving the junior years, and several other good state primaries across the wider town. For secondary, Broadwater School is the main local option, while Godalming College draws sixth formers from across the surrounding villages. For those considering independent education, Charterhouse sits directly to the north of the town, taking both day pupils and boarders, and its presence shapes the character of this part of Godalming in more ways than one.
Local Attractions
One of the advantages of this particular corner of Godalming is access to Charterhouse Woods, ancient woodland bordering the school grounds that residents of the surrounding streets are able to use. It offers a proper escape into the trees without getting in a car. The River Wey adds a second dimension: a loop along the water and back through the town is accessible within minutes from the house. Throughout the summer the town hosts a number of family-friendly festivals and Music in the Park, a free Sunday concert that runs every Sunday from May to September. There are regular theatre productions both in the Borough Hall and at Charterhouse, and there are plenty of active fitness groups that cater to all abilities. For keen walkers, Godalming sits next to the Surrey Hills, with Winkworth Arboretum, the North Downs Way, and a network of footpaths across this AONB all within easy reach.
Entertainment and Leisure
Godalming's High Street punches well above its size for a market town, with independent cafés, delis, restaurants and shops sitting alongside the practical everyday offer. More than 130 listed buildings line the town centre, giving it a huge amount of character. Holloway Hill Recreation Ground offers a tennis club, bowls, a children's playground and the Howling Owl, where you can sit with a coffee, or something stronger, and watch the cricket on a summer afternoon. On the dining front, independent restaurant, Lavika, has recently opened on the High Street, bringing grill-led Turkish cooking with a Mediterranean sensibility, while Greedy Elephant has become a firm local favourite, offering a well regarded Thai menu. The Fox and Finch is a substantial gastropub with serious food credentials, and the Rose and Crown offers something altogether more lively, a smaller and more characterful pub that keeps later hours and has a loyal following. Church Street, one of Godalming's prettiest historic streets and the location used for Cameron Diaz and Jude Law's scenes in the 2006 film The Holiday, is home to The Star: a pub with a rich history dating to the 1600s that was crowned the UK's Best Pub of 2025 at the Greene King Pub Awards and has featured in the CAMRA Good Beer Guide for over twenty years. For a Sunday afternoon further afield, The Stag on the River in Lower Eashing, an 18th century pub on the banks of the River Wey, offers a picturesque setting for lunch or dinner. Guildford, ten minutes by car or train, provides everything else: a main theatre, larger retail, and a lively restaurant scene.

