If you’re looking to move house, you might be wondering where the up-and-coming areas of Portsmouth are. It’s a question the England and Wales census can help us to answer.
One of its results is a measure of household deprivation. By comparing the scores from the 2011 census with those from the 2021 census, we can see which neighbourhoods are less deprived than they were before.
There are lots of possible ways to measure household deprivation, and the method used by the Office for National Statistics doesn’t take income into account.
Instead, it looks at four different measures: unemployment, low qualification levels, poor health and bad housing.
Across England and Wales as a whole, more than half of households (52 per cent) were deprived in at least one of these four possible ways when the census took place in 2021 - that’s 12.8 million households.
But this is a fall from the decade before, when the figure was 58 per cent.
The census also divides England and Wales into more than 7,000 smaller areas of between 5,000 and 15,000 residents, called middle-layer super output areas.
For each of these areas, it publishes how many households were deprived in at least one of its four measures.
Here are the areas of Portsmouth where the proportion of deprived households fell the most between 2011 and 2021.

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These are the most up-and-coming neighbourhoods in Portsmouth Photo: Google

2. Southsea West
In the Southsea West area, 51.9% of households were not deprived in 2021, an improvement on 2011 when the figure was 43.1%. Pic Osborne Road, Google. Photo: Google

3. Paulsgrove East
In the Paulsgrove East area, 34.6% of households were not deprived in 2021, an improvement on 2011 when the figure was 27.1% Pic: Abbeydore Road, Google Photo: Google

4. Old Portsmouth and Southsea Common
In the Old Portsmouth and Southsea Common area, 53.2% of households were not deprived in 2021, an improvement on 2011 when the figure was 46.3% Pic Southsea Common/Clarence Parade, Google. Photo: Google