About Stubbington
Location and Setting
Stubbington is a village in south Hampshire, positioned between the coastal community of Lee-on-the-Solent to the south-east and the market town of Fareham to the north-east. The village sits on the Hampshire coastal plain, roughly one and a half miles from the Solent coast at Hill Head and three miles from Fareham town centre. To the west, open farmland stretches toward Titchfield and the Meon valley. This position gives Stubbington an unusual character: it is suburban in density but rural in feel, with the coast, countryside, and town all within easy reach.
Village Character
Stubbington has the feel of a Hampshire village that has grown substantially but not lost its centre. The cluster of shops, pubs, and services around Stubbington Lane, the village green, and Holy Rood Church still functions as the heart of the community. Residents walk to the post office, pick up groceries at the Co-op, and meet at The Golden Bowler in a pattern that has more in common with village life than suburban routine. The annual Stubbington Fayre, held on the green each summer, draws the community together in a way that reinforces this identity. The schools, particularly the Crofton primary schools, create networks of families who know one another, and the general sense is of a place where people recognise their neighbours.
History
Stubbington appears in the Domesday Book of 1086 as a small agricultural settlement, and it remained a farming village for the best part of eight centuries. Holy Rood Church dates from the twelfth century and is the oldest building in the village. The great transformation came after the Second World War, when housing development expanded the village from a compact settlement of a few hundred people into a residential community of over ten thousand. The proximity of HMS Daedalus, the naval air station at Lee-on-the-Solent, brought military families and connected the village to the defence economy that dominated the Gosport peninsula. Today, Stubbington's history is visible primarily in the church, the village centre layout, and the surviving field patterns on its western and northern edges.
Green Spaces and the Coast
Holly Hill Woodland Park, on the southern edge of the village, provides the main outdoor amenity: a substantial area of managed woodland with walking trails, a children's play area, and a cafe. It is free to enter and well used throughout the year. From Holly Hill, walking routes continue south to the coast at Hill Head, where a harbour, beach huts, and Solent views provide a seaside dimension to life in the village. Titchfield Haven nature reserve is accessible from the western edge, offering birdwatching and quiet coastal walks. To the north and west, footpaths cross open farmland toward Titchfield and the Meon valley. For a suburban village, the access to genuinely varied outdoor space is one of Stubbington's strongest assets.
Living in Stubbington
Stubbington is served by state primary and secondary schools that are well regarded locally. The village centre provides everyday essentials, with Fareham and Lee-on-the-Solent covering wider needs within a short drive. Bus services connect to Fareham and Gosport, and Fareham railway station is three miles away. The housing market is dominated by family homes at prices that are moderate by south Hampshire standards. The village attracts families drawn by the schools and community feel, retirees who value the quiet setting and manageable scale, and commuters who appreciate the M27 access via Fareham. Traffic through the village, particularly at peak times, is the perennial local concern, but for most residents the trade-off between accessibility and village character is one they are content with.