District
|
Year of charter
|
Previous boroughs
|
Notes
|
Allerdale
|
4 June 1992[6]
|
Workington (1883)
|
Charter trustees for Workington had existed 1974 to 1982. Abolished 2023.
|
Amber Valley
|
17 May 1989[7]
|
None
|
|
Ashford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Tenterden (reformed 1835)
|
Tenterden formed a town council in 1974
|
Barnsley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Barnsley (1869)
|
|
Barrow-in-Furness
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Barrow-in-Furness (1867)
|
Abolished 2023
|
Basildon
|
26 October 2010[10][11]
|
None
|
|
Basingstoke and Deane
|
20 January 1978[12]
|
Basingstoke (reformed 1835)
|
Basingstoke had charter trustees 1974–1978
|
Bath
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Bath (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished 1996
|
Bedford
|
See North Bedfordshire
|
Berwick-upon-Tweed
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Berwick-upon-Tweed (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished in April 2009. Civic functions transferred to Berwick-upon-Tweed Town Council.[13]
|
Beverley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Beverley (reformed 1835)
|
Renamed East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley 1981. Abolished 1996.
|
Birmingham
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Birmingham (1838), Sutton Coldfield (1885)[14]
|
|
Blackburn
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Blackburn (1851), Darwen (1878)
|
Renamed Blackburn with Darwen 1997
|
Blackpool
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Blackpool (1876)
|
|
Blyth Valley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Blyth (1922)
|
Abolished in April 2009.[13]
|
Bolton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bolton (1838)
|
|
Boothferry
|
28 April 1978[15]
|
Goole (1933)
|
Goole had charter trustees 1974–1978. Abolished 1996.
|
Boston
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Boston (reformed 1835)
|
|
Bournemouth
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bournemouth (1890)
|
Abolished April 2019
|
Bracknell Forest
|
27 April 1988[16]
|
None
|
|
Bradford
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Bradford (1847)
|
|
Brentwood
|
10 March 1993[17]
|
None
|
|
Brighton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Brighton (1854)
|
Abolished 1997.
|
Brighton & Hove
|
1 April 1997[18] (granted city status in 2000)
|
Formed from Brighton, Hove districts
|
Bristol
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Bristol (reformed 1835)
|
|
Broxbourne
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Broxtowe
|
10 November 1977[12]
|
None
|
|
Burnley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Burnley (1861)
|
|
Bury
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bury (1876)
|
|
Calderdale
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Halifax (1848), Brighouse (1893), Todmorden (1896)
|
|
Cambridge
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Cambridge (reformed 1835)
|
|
Canterbury
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Canterbury (reformed 1835)
|
|
Carlisle
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Carlisle (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished 2023
|
Castle Morpeth
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Morpeth (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished in April 2009.[13][19]
|
Castle Point
|
1992[20]
|
None
|
|
Charnwood
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Loughborough (1888)
|
|
Chelmsford
|
10 November 1977[12]
|
Chelmsford (1888)
|
Chelmsford had charter trustees 1974–1977
Granted city status in 2012
|
Cheltenham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Cheltenham (1876)
|
|
Cheshire East
|
1 April 2009[21] [22]
|
Congleton, Crewe and Nantwich, Macclesfield
|
Created April 2009
|
Cheshire West and Chester
|
1 April 2009[21] [22]
|
Chester, Ellesmere Port and Neston, Vale Royal
|
Created April 2009
|
Chester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Chester (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2009
|
Chesterfield
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Chesterfield (reformed 1835)
|
|
Chorley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Chorley (1881)
|
|
Christchurch
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Christchurch (reformed 1886)
|
Abolished April 2019
|
Cleethorpes
|
11 September 1975[23]
|
Cleethorpes (1936)
|
Cleethorpes had charter trustees 1974–1975. Borough abolished 1996
|
Colchester
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Colchester (reformed 1835)
|
Granted city status in 2022
|
Congleton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Congleton (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2009
|
Copeland
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Whitehaven (1894)
|
Abolished 2023
|
Corby
|
28 October 1992[17]
|
None
|
Abolished April 2021
|
Coventry
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Coventry (reformed 1835)
|
|
Crawley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Crewe and Nantwich
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Crewe (1877)
|
Abolished April 2009
|
Dacorum
|
10 October 1984[24]
|
Hemel Hempstead (1898)
|
Hemel Hempstead had charter trustees 1974–1984
|
Darlington
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Darlington (1867)
|
|
Dartford
|
22 April 1977[25]
|
Dartford (1933)
|
Dartford had charter trustees 1974–1977
|
Derby
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status in 1977)
|
Derby (reformed 1835)
|
|
Doncaster
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Doncaster (reformed 1835)
|
Granted city status in 2022
|
Dudley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Dudley (1865), Stourbridge (1914), Halesowen (1936)
|
|
Durham
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Durham and Framwellgate (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2009. Charter Trustees established.[26]
|
East Staffordshire
|
11 May 1992[17]
|
Burton upon Trent (1878)
|
Charter trustees for Burton functioned 1974–1992. They were formally abolished in 2003.
|
East Yorkshire
|
See North Wolds
|
East Yorkshire Borough of Beverley
|
See Beverley
|
Eastbourne
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Eastbourne (1883)
|
|
Eastleigh
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Eastleigh (1936)
|
|
Ellesmere Port
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Ellesmere Port (1955)
|
renamed Ellesmere Port and Neston 1976. Abolished April 2009.
|
Elmbridge
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Epsom and Ewell
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Epsom and Ewell (1937)
|
|
Erewash
|
28 June 1974[27]
|
Ilkeston (1887)
|
Ilkeston had charter trustees April–June 1974
|
Exeter
|
1 April 1974[8][9](and city status)
|
Exeter (reformed 1835)
|
|
Fareham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Fylde
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Lytham St. Annes (1922)
|
|
Gateshead
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Gateshead (reformed 1835)
|
|
Gedling
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Gillingham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Gillingham (1903)
|
Abolished 1996
|
Glanford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
Abolished 1996
|
Gloucester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Gloucester (reformed 1835)
|
|
Gosport
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Gosport (1922)
|
|
Gravesham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Gravesend (reformed 1835)
|
|
Great Yarmouth
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Great Yarmouth (reformed 1835)
|
|
Grimsby
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Grimsby (reformed 1835)
|
Renamed Great Grimsby 1979, abolished 1996.
|
Guildford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Guildford (reformed 1835)
|
|
Halton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Widnes (1892)
|
|
Harrogate
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Harrogate (1884)
|
Abolished 2023
|
Hartlepool
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Hartlepool formed 1967 from Hartlepool (1850), West Hartlepool (1887)
|
|
Hastings
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Hastings (reformed 1835)
|
|
Havant
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Hereford
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Hereford (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished 1998
|
Hertsmere
|
15 April 1977[25]
|
None
|
|
High Peak
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Glossop (1866), Buxton (1917)
|
|
Hinckley and Bosworth
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Holderness
|
21 June 1977[28]
|
Hedon (1861) (formed a town council in 1974)
|
Abolished 1996
|
Hove
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Hove (1898)
|
Abolished 1997
|
Hyndburn
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Accrington (1878)
|
|
Ipswich
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Ipswich (reformed 1835)
|
|
Kettering
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Kettering (1938)
|
Abolished April 2021
|
King's Lynn and West Norfolk
|
See West Norfolk
|
Kingston upon Hull
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Kingston upon Hull (reformed 1835)
|
|
Kingswood
|
20 May 1987[7]
|
None
|
Abolished 1996
|
Kirklees
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Dewsbury (1862), Huddersfield (1868), Batley (1868), Spenborough (1955)
|
|
Knowsley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Lancaster
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Lancaster (reformed 1835)
|
|
Langbaurgh
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Redcar (incorporated in 1921)
|
Renamed Langbaurgh on Tees 1988
Renamed Redcar and Cleveland 1996
|
Leeds
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Leeds (reformed 1835), Pudsey (1889)
|
|
Leicester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Leicester (reformed 1835)
|
|
Lincoln
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Lincoln (reformed 1835)
|
|
Liverpool
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Liverpool (reformed 1835)
|
|
Luton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Luton (1876)
|
|
Macclesfield
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Macclesfield (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2009
|
Maidstone
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Maidstone (reformed 1835)
|
|
Manchester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Manchester (1838)
|
|
Medina
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Newport (reformed 1835), Ryde (1868)
|
Abolished 1995
|
Medway (1)
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Rochester (reformed 1835), Chatham (1890)
|
Renamed Rochester-upon-Medway 1979, and awarded city status.
Abolished 1998
|
Medway (2)
|
1998
|
From Rochester upon Medway, Gillingham boroughs (q.v.)
|
|
Melton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Middlesbrough
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Middlesbrough (incorporated in 1853)
|
|
Milton Keynes
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
Granted city status in 2022
|
Newcastle-under-Lyme
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Newcastle-under-Lyme (reformed 1835)
|
|
Newcastle upon Tyne
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Newcastle upon Tyne (reformed 1835)
|
|
Northampton[29]
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Northampton (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2021. Mayoralty continued by Northampton Town Council
|
North Bedfordshire
|
16 October 1975[30]
|
Bedford (reformed 1835)
|
Renamed Bedford 1992
|
North East Lincolnshire
|
23 August 1996[31]
|
From Cleethorpes, Great Grimsby boroughs (q.v.)
|
Both former boroughs formed charter trustees
|
North Lincolnshire
|
16 December 1996[31]
|
Formed from Boothferry, Glanford, and Scunthorpe boroughs (q.v.)
|
Scunthorpe's mayoralty is continued by charter trustees
|
North Tyneside
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Tynemouth (1849), Wallsend (1901)
|
|
North Warwickshire
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
North Wolds
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bridlington (1899)
|
Renamed East Yorkshire 1981.
Abolished 1996
|
Norwich
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Norwich (reformed 1835)
|
|
Nottingham
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Nottingham (reformed 1835)
|
|
Nuneaton
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Nuneaton (1907)
|
Renamed Nuneaton and Bedworth 1980
|
Oadby and Wigston
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Oldham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Oldham (1849)
|
|
Oswestry
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Oswestry Rural Borough (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished in April 2009.
|
Oxford
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Oxford (reformed 1835)
|
|
Pendle
|
15 September 1976[23]
|
Nelson (1890), Colne (1895)
|
|
Peterborough
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Peterborough (1874)
|
|
Plymouth
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Plymouth (reformed 1835)
|
|
Poole
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Poole (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2019
|
Portsmouth
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Portsmouth (reformed 1835)
|
|
Preston
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (granted city status in 2002)
|
Preston (reformed 1835)
|
|
Reading
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Reading (reformed 1835)
|
|
Redcar and Cleveland
|
See Langbaurgh
|
Redditch
|
15 May 1980[32]
|
None
|
|
Reigate and Banstead
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Reigate (reformed (1863)
|
|
Restormel
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
St. Austell with Fowey (formed 1968, including Fowey 1913)
|
Abolished in April 2009.
|
Ribble Valley
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Clitheroe (reformed 1835)
|
|
Rochdale
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Rochdale (1856), Heywood (1881), Middleton (1886)
|
|
Rochester upon Medway
|
See Medway (1)
|
Rossendale
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bacup (1882), Haslingden (1891), Rawtenstall (1891)
|
|
Rotherham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Rotherham, (1871)
|
|
Rugby
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Rugby (1932)
|
|
Runnymede
|
20 January 1978[12]
|
None
|
|
Rushcliffe
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Rushmoor
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Aldershot (1922)
|
|
St Albans
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
St Albans (reformed 1835)
|
|
St Edmundsbury
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Bury St Edmunds (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2019
|
St Helens
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
St Helens (1868)
|
|
Salford
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Salford (1844), Eccles (1892), Swinton and Pendlebury (1934)
|
|
Sandwell
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
West Bromwich (1882), including since 1966 the former boroughs of Tipton (1938) and Wednesbury (1886);[33] Warley (1966), including the former boroughs of Smethwick (1899), Rowley Regis (1933), and Oldbury (1935)
|
|
Scarborough
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Scarborough (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished 2023
|
Scunthorpe
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Scunthorpe (1936)
|
Abolished 1996
|
Sedgefield
|
17 October 1996[31]
|
None
|
Abolished April 2009. Mayoralty continued by Sedgefield Town Council[26]
|
Sefton
|
17 April 1975
|
Southport (1866), Bootle (1868), Crosby (1937)
|
All three towns formed charter trustees 1974–1975
|
Sheffield
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Sheffield (1843)
|
|
Shrewsbury and Atcham
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Shrewsbury (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished in April 2009.[34]
|
Slough
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Slough (1938)
|
|
Solihull
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Solihull (1954)
|
|
Southampton
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Southampton (reformed 1835)
|
|
Southend-on-Sea
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Southend-on-Sea (1892)
|
Granted city status in 2022
|
South Ribble
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
South Tyneside
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
South Shields (1850), Jarrow (1875)
|
|
South Wight
|
1974?
|
None
|
Abolished 1995
|
Spelthorne
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Stafford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Stafford (reformed 1835)
|
|
Stevenage
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Stockport
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Stockport (reformed 1835)
|
|
Stockton-on-Tees
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Formed from part of Teesside county borough, created in 1967, and including Stockton-on-Tees (reformed 1835) and Thornaby-on-Tees (incorporated in 1892)
|
|
Stoke-on-Trent
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Stoke-on-Trent formed 1910, including boroughs of Hanley (incorporated in 1857), Longton (1865), Burslem (1878), Stoke-upon-Trent (1874).
|
|
Sunderland
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (granted city status in 1992)
|
Sunderland (reformed 1835)
|
|
Surrey Heath
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Swale
|
20 January 1978[12]
|
Faversham (reformed 1835), Queenborough-in-Sheppey (created 1968, including borough of Queenborough, reformed in 1885)
|
Queenborough-in-Sheppey formed charter trustees 1974–1977
|
Swindon
|
See Thamesdown
|
Tameside
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Ashton-under-Lyne (1847), Stalybridge (1857), Hyde (1881), Mossley (1885), Dukinfield (1899)
|
|
Tamworth
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Tamworth (reformed 1835)
|
|
Taunton Deane
|
1975
|
Taunton (1885)
|
Taunton had charter trustees 1974–1975, Abolished April 2019
|
Telford and Wrekin
|
2002
|
None
|
|
Test Valley
|
22 October 1976[23]
|
Andover, Romsey, both reformed 1835
|
Andover had charter trustees 1974–1976. Romsey formed a town council.
|
Tewkesbury
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Tewkesbury (reformed 1835)
|
|
Thamesdown
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Swindon (1900)
|
Renamed Swindon 1997
|
Thurrock
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
|
Tonbridge and Malling
|
12 December 1983[35]
|
None
|
|
Torbay
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
County borough of Torbay – created 1968, and including the borough of Torquay incorporated in 1892
|
|
Trafford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Stretford (1933), Sale (1935), Altrincham (1937)
|
|
Tunbridge Wells
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Royal Tunbridge Wells (1888)
|
Charter trustees for Royal Tunbridge Wells existed from 1 April to 20 December 1974
|
Vale Royal
|
5 May 1988[16]
|
None
|
Abolished April 2009
|
Wakefield
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Pontefract (reformed 1835), Wakefield (1848), Ossett (1890), Castleford (1955)
|
|
Walsall
|
1 April 1974[8][9][36]
|
Walsall (reformed 1835)
|
Warrington
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Warrington (1847)
|
|
Watford
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Watford (1922)
|
|
Waverley
|
21 February 1984[35]
|
Godalming (reformed 1835)
|
Godalming formed a town council in 1974
|
Wellingborough
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
None
|
Abolished April 2021
|
Welwyn Hatfield
|
3 April 2006[37]
|
None
|
|
West Devon
|
27 April 1982[38]
|
Okehampton (reformed 1885)
|
Okehampton formed a town council in 1974
|
West Norfolk
|
30 June 1981[32]
|
King's Lynn (reformed 1835)
|
Renamed King's Lynn and West Norfolk 14 May 1981[32]
|
West Lancashire
|
1 April 2009[21] [39]
|
None
|
|
Weymouth and Portland
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Weymouth and Melcombe Regis (reformed 1835)
|
Abolished April 2019
|
Wigan
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Wigan (reformed 1835), Leigh (1899)
|
Leigh Abolished 1972
|
Winchester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Winchester (reformed 1835)
|
|
Windsor and Maidenhead
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (Royal Borough)
|
Windsor, Maidenhead, both reformed 1835
|
|
Wirral
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Birkenhead (1877), Wallasey (1910), Bebington (1937)
|
|
Woking
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
none
|
|
Wokingham
|
1 March 2007[40]
|
Wokingham (reformed 1883)
|
Wokingham formed a town council in 1974
|
Wolverhampton
|
1 April 1974.[8][9] Granted city status 2000
|
Wolverhampton (1848). Had absorbed the borough of Bilston in 1967 (incorporated in 1938).
|
|
Worcester
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
Worcester (reformed 1835)
|
|
Worthing
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Worthing, 1890
|
|
Wyre
|
1 April 1974[8][9]
|
Fleetwood (1933)
|
|
York (1)
|
1 April 1974[8][9] (and city status)
|
York (reformed 1835)
|
The District was abolished and replaced with a larger unitary authority in 1996
|
York (2)
|
1 April 1996[31] (and city status)
|
Created in 1996. Inherited traditions from the smaller York district.
|