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How deprived is Birmingham 129F?

Birmingham 129F is a small area called a Lower-layer Super Output Area (LSOA) in Birmingham.

LSOAs – referred to here as 'neighbourhoods' – have an average population of 1,600 people.

The latest available data, released in 2025, shows that:

Birmingham 129F is more deprived than most neighbourhoods in England

About three quarters of neighbourhoods in England are less deprived (ranked 9,023 out of 33,755 neighbourhoods).

This is an overall measure, called the Index of Multiple Deprivation. It is calculated by combining different types of deprivation in this neighbourhood.

What is deprivation?

Deprivation is a lack of resources needed in life.

This data can be used to compare relative levels of deprivation in different neighbourhoods. However, it can't be used to measure absolute levels of deprivation in a neighbourhood, or to assess trends over time.

Birmingham 129F is less deprived than most neighbourhoods within Birmingham

The Birmingham local authority district contains 658 other neighbourhoods. About two thirds of neighbourhoods in this area are more deprived than the neighbourhood you selected.

There are different types of deprivation in Birmingham 129F

The neighbourhood you selected is most deprived in relation to crime. 85% of neighbourhoods in England are less deprived.

It's also possible to measure income deprivation affecting people of different ages.

Birmingham 129F has a higher rate of income deprivation affecting children (IDACI) than most neighbourhoods in England.

It also has a higher rate of income deprivation affecting older people (IDAOPI) than most neighbourhoods in England.

Income deprivation affecting:

Compared to other neighbourhoods in Birmingham, Birmingham 129F is most deprived in relation to crime

About two thirds of neighbourhoods in Birmingham are less deprived in relation to crime than the neighbourhood you selected.

About this article

This article contains semi-automated text. This means that the sentences are produced according to rules programmed by staff at the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government, based on the data for a local area.

Further reading

What is an LSOA?

Read about the characteristics of Lower-layer Super Output Areas on the Office for National Statistics website.

Technical and research reports

These reports provide information on the methodology of the 2025 Indices of Deprivation.

Related

Glossary

Understand the terms used in the Indices of Deprivation dataset

Explore data on a map

See deprivation data for Birmingham and the surrounding area using interactive maps

Get the data

Download the latest deprivation data, as well as geospatial and contextual information