Instant prices paid data for England and Wales
Horsham sits in the Weald, positioned naturally between the North and South Downs, serving as a historic market hub for this part of West Sussex. The town is built around the Carfax - an open pedestrianized square where the name suggests four roads meet - and the Causeway, a remarkably well-preserved medieval street that leads toward the 13th-century St Mary’s Church. Geographically, it is defined by the River Arun, which skirts the southern edge of the town, and the extensive greenery of Horsham Park. For transport, it is a practical location, with direct rail links into London Victoria and London Bridge, while the proximity to the A24 provides straightforward road access to the coast at Worthing and the M23. While much of the town has modernized, you still find plenty of local Wealden sandstone and Horsham stone roofing slates in the older buildings, rooted in the town’s origins as a center for the iron and timber industries.