Local elections profile: Bromley

Tony GrewLondon
News imageGetty Images A theatre and library building on a shopping street in suburban London on a sunny day. The words Churchill Theatre & Bromley Central Library are of the building. Getty Images
The Churchill Theatre is a well-known Bromley landmark

Ahead of the local elections on Thursday 7 May, we have produced short guides to London's 32 boroughs.

Where is it? The London Borough of Bromley is in south-east London and borders Lewisham, Greenwich, Bexley, Southwark, Lambeth, Croydon, Surrey and Kent.

What's it like? With the most green space in London, the borough is partly urban and partly rural, with a chunk of built-up area of suburban London and the northern part of the North Downs.

Neighbourhoods: Bromley, Penge, Biggin Hill, Hayes, West Wickham, Chislehurst, Beckenham and Orpington.

Places of interest: Chislehurst Caves, Down House, Crystal Palace Park, Priory Gardens, Churchill Theatre, Crofton Wood.

Pub quiz fact: Bromley is the largest London borough by area at 59 sq miles (150 sq km).

Population (2024 estimate): 335,319 according to the Office of National Statistics (ONS)

Demographics: According to the 2021 census, 76.5% identify as white, 8.3% as Asian, 7.6% as black, 5.4% as mixed race and 2.3% as another ethnic group.

Average property price in (December 2025): £535,000 reports the ONS

Average monthly rent (January 2025): £1,599

Council tax: Band D council tax in the borough for 2026/27 is £2,140.

Transport: There are no Tube stations in Bromley. It has three London Overground stations, five tram stops and around 1,060 bus stops. There are 26 railway stations providing links to the rest of London and to Kent.

News imagePA Media A suburban terraced house with a bay window and a small front garden surrounded by a weathered and white fence. The house and front door are painted grey. PA Media
This modest Bromley property was the childhood home of singer David Bowie

Local history: Bromley began as an Anglo-Saxon settlement named Bromleag in the 9th century. It was also the site of one of several palatial residences for the Bishops of Rochester.

It was granted a market charter in 1205 and remained a prosperous Kentish town surrounded by farmland until the arrival of the railway in the 1850s, which turned the northern part of what is now the borough of Bromley into the suburbs of London.

During the Second World War, Biggin Hill Aerodrome was the base for RAF Fighter Command. Bromley is the birthplace of H.G. Wells, and musician David Bowie grew up at 4 Plaistow Grove.

News imageGetty Images A Spitfire on the ground at an aerodrome. There are other aircraft visible in the background and foreground. Getty Images
In WWII, Biggin Hill Aerodrome was the base for RAF Fighter Command

What is the borough's electoral history? Bromley, Beckenham, Orpington and Chislehurst were moved from Kent into London to form parts of the borough in 1965. It has been a Conservative-run council since its creation - with the exception of 1998 to 2002 - when a Lib Dem/Labour coalition took control.

What happened in 2022? The turnout was 37.2% and there was a swing of 6% from Conservative to Labour. The Conservatives retained control of the council but lost 14 seats.

Conservative: 36 seats (-14)

Labour: 12 seats (+4)

Lib Dem 5 seats (+5)

Chislehurst Matters 3 seats (+3)

Independent 2 seats (n/c)

Boundary changes reduced the number of seats in 2022 from 60 to 58.

Since the election, two councillors have defected from the Conservatives to Reform UK, and Reform UK also won a by-election.

Election expert Tony Travers on what might happen in Bromley in 2026

What we can expect in Bromley for the 2026 London local elections?

Professor Tony Travers, of the London School of Economics, said Bromley - like its neighbour Bexley - looks as if Reform UK will do well.

He added that if we look across into Kent last year, "Reform UK did do well there, but the Conservatives are still strong in the borough, so it could well go to no overall control".

Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk

Related internet links