Ultra-thin Victorian terraced house in Chatham hits market at £75,000
Two-bedroom fixer-up measures about 7 feet wide and is being sold via online auction; estate agent says property 'requires modernisation'.

A Victorian terraced house in Chatham, Kent, measuring roughly 7 feet wide has been placed on the market with a guide price of £75,000 and is being sold through an online auction that closes Wednesday, Sept. 17.
The two-bedroom, one-bathroom property sits on Grange Hill near Rochester Castle and is described in the listing as having no chain. The ground floor measures about 7 feet 2 inches wide, and the upstairs accommodation includes a cramped double bedroom and a smaller room measuring about 4 feet 7 inches.
The home is being marketed as a fixer-upper. Photographs in the listing show peeling and yellowing wallpaper, worn carpets, an outdated bathroom with a teal suite and a compact galley kitchen with limited worktop space. The kitchen contains an oven, washing machine and fridge and has a door to a narrow garden that appears overgrown and is squeezed between neighbouring yards. A loft space, accessed by a pull-down ladder from the landing, includes a skylight and offers additional storage.
Estate agent McHugh & Co said the property "requires modernisation" and is "conveniently close" to Chatham railway station. Online estate portal OnTheMarket noted the house was reportedly built to accommodate a family member in the residual space between the original terrace.
The listing emphasises the central location and transport links to London, presenting the property as a potential option for buyers prepared to invest in refurbishment. The auction is live online; prospective buyers must submit bids by the stated deadline.
Small, narrow properties have attracted attention in the U.K. market before. A widely reported example is a former studio flat on Thurloe Square in London described as about 6 feet wide at its narrowest point; that property sold in 2022 for a substantially higher sum. Market observers say unusual layouts can draw interest from buyers seeking central locations or distinctive homes, but agents caution that narrow properties often require bespoke refurbishment and may pose challenges for resale.
The Chatham terrace's combination of a low guide price, compact footprint and central location is likely to attract both private buyers and investors. Interested parties should review the online auction particulars and the legal pack for information on title, any planning history and required works. McHugh & Co's marketing material does not detail a reserve price in the listing information shared publicly.
The sale will proceed under the terms of the online auction. Bidders and interested buyers are advised to view the property photographs, survey promptly if considering a purchase and seek independent advice on the scope and cost of modernisation works before placing bids.