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London's Trusted Party Wall Surveyors

We Are Your Local
Party Wall Specialists

London's Highly Trusted Party Wall Surveyors, helping you navigate the Party Wall etc. Act with confidence and ease.

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Fast & Ethical

Quick turnaround without cutting corners

Highly Reviewed

Rated Excellent by clients across London

150+ Five-Star Google Reviews

Competitive Fixed Fees

Clear, competitive pricing with no hidden costs

Voices from the Neighbourhood

★★★★★   150+ Five-Star Google Reviews   ★★★★★

★★★★★

"Tim has been great from start to finish, with excellent communication throughout the process. I couldn’t recommend highly enough!"

— Peter Moorhead

★★★★★

"Tim was just what we needed. Efficient, helpful and knowledgable. He made it a very smooth process. Would highly recommend."

— Isabelle Le Riche

★★★★★

"I would highly recommend Tim. He was a fantastic help to ensure that I got the outcome I was after. 10/10"

— Dan Gray

★★★★★

"Very good quality of service and helped through beyond party wall needs. Knowledgable and highly recommended."

— Rajasankar R.

★★★★★

"Excellent service from Tim — very accommodating and supportive throughout. I would highly recommend."

— Karen Hayles

★★★★★

"Tim was very supportive and offered professional advice which helped us to resolve the issues quickly. Thank you."

— Dianne Friday

★★★★★

"Tim was exceptionally helpful in providing prompt and insightful advice on a time-sensitive matter."

— Paul Arthur

★★★★★

"Excellent work by Tim Haq in preparing and organising party wall notices. Very helpful, prompt and efficient."

— Richard Parry

★★★★★

"Tim was great; very responsive, reassuring and patient in his guidance. Highly recommended."

— Simon Wongsuwarn

★★★★★

"An absolute pleasure to work with. 10/10. Cannot recommend enough! Very helpful and informative."

— Hanifa Islam

★★★★★

"Brilliant job by Tim, took time out to explain all the rules and regs and was very thorough."

— M Nasir

★★★★★

"Excellent service, always kept me in the loop and really professional. Happy with service."

— Saff

★★★★★

"Tim has been great from start to finish, with excellent communication throughout the process. I couldn’t recommend highly enough!"

— Peter Moorhead

★★★★★

"Tim was just what we needed. Efficient, helpful and knowledgable. He made it a very smooth process. Would highly recommend."

— Isabelle Le Riche

★★★★★

"I would highly recommend Tim. He was a fantastic help to ensure that I got the outcome I was after. 10/10"

— Dan Gray

★★★★★

"Very good quality of service and helped through beyond party wall needs. Knowledgable and highly recommended."

— Rajasankar R.

★★★★★

"Excellent service from Tim — very accommodating and supportive throughout. I would highly recommend."

— Karen Hayles

★★★★★

"Tim was very supportive and offered professional advice which helped us to resolve the issues quickly. Thank you."

— Dianne Friday

★★★★★

"Tim was exceptionally helpful in providing prompt and insightful advice on a time-sensitive matter."

— Paul Arthur

★★★★★

"Excellent work by Tim Haq in preparing and organising party wall notices. Very helpful, prompt and efficient."

— Richard Parry

★★★★★

"Tim was great; very responsive, reassuring and patient in his guidance. Highly recommended."

— Simon Wongsuwarn

★★★★★

"An absolute pleasure to work with. 10/10. Cannot recommend enough! Very helpful and informative."

— Hanifa Islam

★★★★★

"Brilliant job by Tim, took time out to explain all the rules and regs and was very thorough."

— M Nasir

★★★★★

"Excellent service, always kept me in the loop and really professional. Happy with service."

— Saff

Read all client reviews →

"Navigating the Party Wall Act doesn't have to be a headache — we're here to make it straightforward and stress-free."

With years of experience and MFPWS / MPTS accreditation, our London-based surveyors have resolved thousands of party wall disputes — from loft conversions and rear/side extensions to complex basement excavations. Fast & ethical, with competitive fixed fees.

Which Side of the Wall Are You On?

Whether you're carrying out works or your neighbour is — we're here for you.

For Building Owners

Planning works?

“Planning works and unsure about notices? We’ll guide you.”

  • Serve valid party wall notices
  • Schedule of condition surveys
  • Prepare party wall awards
  • Fixed fees, no surprises

For Adjoining Owners

Received a notice?

“Got a party-wall notice? Let’s sort it out together.”

  • Protect your property rights
  • Review neighbour’s proposals
  • Fees typically paid by building owner
  • Free, impartial advice

How We Help

Comprehensive party wall services tailored to your needs, delivered with expertise and transparency.

Project Review

Comprehensive review of proposed building works to establish party wall obligations and advise on the correct course of action.

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Act as Your Surveyor

Appointed to act on your behalf under the Act — for Building Owners, Adjoining Owners, or as the Agreed Surveyor.

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Schedule of Condition

Detailed photographic and written records of adjoining properties before works begin, protecting all parties against future claims.

Learn More →

Trusted By Many, Here Are a Few

We're proud to work alongside leading developers, housing associations, and construction companies across London.

L&Q HousingHexagon HousingDiamond ConstructionHorton HomesMidtown CapitalMoor AssociatesProperty ExpertsMortar RenovationsAxis Vector DesignDin Bros ConstructionMatterhorn Properties L&Q HousingHexagon HousingDiamond ConstructionHorton HomesMidtown CapitalMoor AssociatesProperty ExpertsMortar RenovationsAxis Vector DesignDin Bros ConstructionMatterhorn Properties

Our Journey So Far

A selection of projects we've worked on across London and the South East.

Shakespeare Hotel

Shakespeare Hotel, Stratford

Longley Road

Longley Road, Tooting

The Grove

The Grove, Coulsdon

Box Ridge

Box Ridge Avenue, Purley

Bellingham Mews

Bellingham Mews, Catford

White Post Street

White Post Street, Peckham

Wimbledon Park Road

Wimbledon Park Road

Greesham Gardens

Greesham Gardens, Hampstead

Wayneflete Tower

Wayneflete Tower, Esher

Ormund Gate

Ormund Gate, Chelsea

Shakespeare Hotel

Shakespeare Hotel, Stratford

Longley Road

Longley Road, Tooting

The Grove

The Grove, Coulsdon

Box Ridge

Box Ridge Avenue, Purley

Bellingham Mews

Bellingham Mews, Catford

White Post Street

White Post Street, Peckham

Wimbledon Park Road

Wimbledon Park Road

Greesham Gardens

Greesham Gardens, Hampstead

Wayneflete Tower

Wayneflete Tower, Esher

Ormund Gate

Ormund Gate, Chelsea

Based in Wimbledon · SW19

Areas We Cover
Streets We've Walked

We're based in Wimbledon — famously home to The Championships and the All England Lawn Tennis Club — and we've got London and the surrounding areas covered.

"Need answers? Chat with us — our advice is free and friendly."

Ready to start your project or need advice?

We're here to help with free, impartial advice. Call us now on 020 8545 2680 / 077 2828 2727 or click below to request a quote.

Request Your Free Quote

About Us

London's Most Trusted
Party Wall Surveyors

Who We Are

Party Wall Specialists are a team of experienced, FPWS-qualified party wall surveyors serving all 33 London boroughs and surrounding areas. We provide expert guidance on all matters relating to the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.

Our mission is simple: to make the party wall process as straightforward and stress-free as possible.

Whether you're a building owner planning works, an adjoining owner who has received a notice, or a developer managing multiple projects, we deliver fast, ethical, and transparent service at competitive fixed fees.

More About Us

Explore who we are in more detail.

Our Core Values

The principles that guide everything we do — from free advice to transparent fixed fees.

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What We Do

A full range of party wall services for building owners, adjoining owners, and developers.

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Areas We Cover

Local party wall surveyors working across all 33 London boroughs and surrounding areas.

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Trusted By

Trusted by leading organisations, architects and developers across Greater London's property and design sector.

L&Q HousingHexagon HousingDiamond ConstructionDin Bros ConstructionHorton HomesMatterhorn PropertiesAxis Vector Design

Need Expert Advice?

Call us today or fill out our contact form for free, no-obligation guidance.

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Our Core Values

The principles that guide everything we do.

At Party Wall Specialists, our values aren't a marketing exercise — they're how we run every project. From the first phone call to the final award, these are the principles we hold ourselves to.

Free Party Wall Advice

Independent guidance at no cost, before you commit. We'd rather give you ten minutes of honest advice than win a project that isn't right for you.

Transparency

Fixed fees agreed upfront, no hidden extras, and plain-English explanations of every step. You'll always know what you're paying for and why.

Communication

We keep you updated at every stage — from notice to award. Calls returned the same day, emails answered promptly, and no client left wondering what's happening.

Personal Connection

Local surveyors who genuinely care about your project. Party wall matters often involve neighbours — we work hard to protect properties and preserve relationships.

Cost Saving

Practical strategies to save you money without cutting corners. We'll always tell you when notices aren't needed — and when a simpler approach will do the job.

Want to Talk to Us?

Free, no-obligation party wall advice from a team that puts ethics first.

Get Free Advice

What We Do

A summary of our core services — from first review to final award.

We handle every stage of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 — whichever side of the wall you’re on. For full details, see our How We Help section.

Not Sure Which Service You Need?

Tell us about your project and we'll point you in the right direction — for free.

Get Free Advice

Areas We Cover

Local party wall surveyors working across all 33 London boroughs and surrounding areas.

We are based in Wimbledon and serve every London borough. Local knowledge matters in party wall work — from the typical construction of Victorian terraces in Hackney to the basement extensions of Kensington — and we know London property inside out.

Click any borough below to see how we work in your area.

Surrounding Areas

While we are based in Wimbledon and cover all 33 London boroughs, we also regularly work in the surrounding counties. If your project is just outside Greater London, we can still help.

Not sure if we cover your area? Give us a call — we're always happy to discuss your project regardless of location.

Working in Your Area

Free, friendly party wall advice — across London and the surrounding areas.

Get Free Advice

Our Services

How We Help

We guide you through every stage of the Party Wall process — and provide free tools most firms don’t.

Project Review

Before any notices are served, we carry out a thorough review of your proposed building works to determine whether the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 applies and what obligations you may have.

We examine your architectural and structural drawings, identify every notifiable element, and advise on the correct notices, timescales, and next steps. This initial review is always free.

View Work TypesBrowse All Works

Types of Works

Every statutory right under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 — from raising a party wall to excavating near a neighbour’s foundations. Common project types include:

Rear / Side Extensions

Foundations near boundaries, flashing into party walls.

Learn More →

Loft Conversions

Steel beams, raising party walls, roof alterations.

Learn More →

Basement Conversions

Deep excavations, underpinning, complex projects.

Learn More →

Chimney Breast Removals

Notifiable works affecting the party wall structure.

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New Buildings

New walls on or astride the boundary line.

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Underpinning

Strengthening or lowering existing foundations.

Learn More →
Browse All Works Under the Act

Appointing Your Surveyor

Under Section 10 of the Act, when a dispute arises, surveyors must be appointed. We act impartially in three capacities:

Building Owner Surveyor

Appointed by the building owner to guide them through the process.

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Adjoining Owner Surveyor

Safeguards the neighbour’s property — at the building owner’s expense.

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Agreed Surveyor

One surveyor for both parties — fastest and most cost-effective.

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MFPWS, MPTS, and ACABE accredited. Professional Indemnity Insurance: £5 million.

Choosing a Surveyor

Notices Prepared & Served

For Building Owners, your surveyor prepares and serves valid notices on all affected adjoining owners. For Adjoining Owners, we review any notices you’ve received and advise on your options.

Section 1

Line of Junction

1 month notice

Section 3

Party Structure

2 months notice

Section 6

Adjacent Excavation

1 month notice

About NoticesFree TemplatesNotice Generator

Schedule of Condition

A detailed photographic and written record of the adjoining property before works begin. Undertaken where requested by the Adjoining Owner or where surveyors have been appointed.

The Schedule protects both parties: the Building Owner has evidence that pre-existing defects were not their fault, and the Adjoining Owner has proof of their property’s condition before works started.

Learn More

Party Wall Award

The legally binding document, prepared and served where surveyors have been appointed and a dispute has arisen. The Award sets out how and when works may proceed, working hours, access arrangements, protective measures, and provisions for making good any damage.

Enforceable through the County Court. Either party can appeal within 14 days.

About Awards

Planning Works?

If you’re a Building Owner planning works, we’ve prepared a plain-English guide covering the full process, your responsibilities, timescales, and our transparent fixed fees — so you can budget with confidence.

Everything from serving notices to receiving the final Award — explained step by step.

Fees & Process

Received a Notice?

If you’re an Adjoining Owner who has received a party wall notice, we explain your options, the process, and what it costs you — which is usually nothing.

The building owner is responsible for all reasonable surveyor fees under the Act.

Your Options

What Makes Us Different

Unlike most firms, we provide free online tools so you can understand the process, check your obligations, and even draft your own notices before you instruct anyone.

Free Notice Templates Online Notice Generator Letters of Appointment Online Do I Need a Notice? Blog & Jargon Busted

Need Expert Advice?

Call us today or fill out our contact form for free, no-obligation guidance.

Contact Us

Project Review — The Works

What Is a Project Review?

Before any party wall notices are served, it is essential to establish whether the proposed building works fall within the scope of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. A Project Review is a detailed assessment of your architectural plans and drawings carried out by one of our qualified surveyors. We identify every element of the proposed works that may trigger obligations under the Act.

Common Work Types We Review

Click on any work type to learn more about how the Party Wall Act applies:

What You Receive

A written report setting out which notices are required, who they must be served on, relevant notice periods, and recommended next steps. Our initial consultation is always free.

See Every Type of Work Under the Act

All statutory rights, notice types, and which projects trigger them — in one filterable reference.

Browse Types of Works →
← Back to How We Help

New Buildings

New Buildings and the Party Wall Act

When you construct a new wall or building along the boundary between your property and a neighbour’s, the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 is almost certainly engaged. This applies whether you’re building a new house on a cleared plot, replacing a demolished property, constructing a wall astride the boundary, or simply building wholly on your own land up to the line.

New-build projects often combine several notifications — a Line of Junction notice for the new wall, and an Adjacent Excavation notice for the foundations. Getting these served together, correctly, and in the right order is the difference between a clean start on site and a stalled project.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

Most new-build projects engage two sections, and sometimes three:

  • Section 1 · Line of Junction — where you intend to build a new wall on or at the boundary with the neighbour. Within this:
    • s.1(2) — new wall astride the boundary (requires the neighbour’s written consent)
    • s.1(5) — new wall wholly on your land but up to the boundary (one month’s notice; consent not required)
  • Section 6 · Adjacent Excavation — foundations dug within 3 metres of a neighbouring building (to any depth below their foundations) or within 6 metres (where the 45° rule is engaged).
  • Section 2 · Works to Existing Party Walls — applies where an existing party wall is involved. The main sub-sections here are:
    • s.2(2)(f) — cutting into the party wall itself for any purpose (beams, padstones, damp-proof course)
    • s.2(2)(j) — cutting into the adjoining owner’s wall to insert flashing or other weatherproofing
    • s.2(2)(h) — cutting away parts of the adjoining owner’s wall or building that overhang your land or a party wall, to enable a vertical wall to be erected or raised

Section 1 and Section 6 require one month’s notice; Section 3 requires two months’. Where multiple notices apply, the longest notice period governs your start date.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

If your neighbour dissents and a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the complexity of the project — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

For a single adjoining owner, assuming no complications:

  • Day 0 — Notice(s) served. Section 1 and Section 6 need one month; Section 3 works need two
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: no Award is needed; works may start on the notice expiry date
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start once the notice period has elapsed
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 2–3 weeks to serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 3–5 weeks to agree and serve the Award

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent to an earlier start. This is common where neighbours are cooperative and the paperwork is in order.

Common Mistakes We See

  • Assuming an empty plot means no party wall issue. Section 1 still applies when you build on or at the boundary — whether a party wall exists or not.
  • Building astride without consent. Section 1(2) requires the neighbour’s written consent for an astride wall. No consent → you must build wholly on your land under s.1(5).
  • Missing Section 6 on foundations. New builds almost always trigger Section 6 for excavation, even where Section 1 is the more visible issue. Both should be served.
  • Serving Section 1 too close to the intended start. One month is the minimum, not the target — the 14-day response window and potential dissent mean you need 6–8 weeks’ headroom.
  • Forgetting multiple neighbours. A corner plot or end-of-terrace rebuild can have two or more adjoining owners. Each needs their own notice, served separately.
  • Free templates that default to domestic extension wording. New builds have specific Section 1 phrasing that most templates get wrong. Our Free Notice Generator handles Line of Junction notices correctly.

Working With Your Neighbours

A notice landing on the doormat with no warning is the single biggest source of neighbour friction we see. Before you serve:

  • Tell them first. New builds involve prolonged site activity — keeping neighbours informed from day one prevents most disputes.
  • Offer the Schedule of Condition route. A new-build programme involves demolition, excavation, and prolonged plant on site; a pre-works SoC protects both sides.
  • Share the construction programme. Working hours, access arrangements, and scaffolding plans should be set out clearly — ideally in the Award itself.
  • Keep them updated during works. Most complaints that escalate aren’t about the works themselves — they’re about feeling ignored.

Planning a new build? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
← Back to Project Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Almost always. New builds typically trigger Section 1 (new walls on or at the boundary) and Section 6 (excavation for foundations), and sometimes Section 2 if an existing party wall is involved. Notices must be served on every adjoining owner.

Section 1 still applies when building on or near the line of junction. If the new wall is astride the boundary, s.1(2) requires the adjoining owner’s consent. If they refuse, you must build wholly on your own land under s.1(5).

s.1(2) — new wall astride the boundary. Requires the neighbour’s written consent. s.1(5) — new wall wholly on your own land, up to the boundary. Consent not required, but 1 month’s notice is.

At least two months before works start, to allow for the notice period, the 14-day response window, and time to appoint surveyors if dissent arises. Section 3 works, if involved, push this to three months.

Not without their consent. Building off existing foundations or projecting footings under their land requires either Section 1(2) astride consent or a separate arrangement — the Party Wall Surveyor will address this in the Award if dissent arises.

Each adjoining owner is served separately. If one consents and one dissents, you’ll have an Award with the dissenting neighbour and no Award with the consenting one. Both processes run in parallel.

Rear/Side Extensions

Rear and Side Extensions and the Party Wall Act

Rear and side extensions are the most popular home improvement in London — and the most common reason we’re asked to serve notices. Almost any ground-floor extension on a terraced or semi-detached property will engage the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 in at least one way, and often several.

The trigger is usually the foundations rather than the walls above. Even if your extension stands clear of the party wall, excavation within 3 metres of a neighbour’s building is almost always notifiable under Section 6. Miss that, and you can find yourself trying to obtain retrospective consent after works have started — a much more difficult and expensive position.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

Most rear and side extension projects engage two sections, and sometimes three:

  • Section 1 · Line of Junction — where you intend to build a new wall on or at the boundary with the neighbour. Within this:
    • s.1(2) — new wall astride the boundary (requires the neighbour’s written consent)
    • s.1(5) — new wall wholly on your land but up to the boundary (one month’s notice; consent not required)
  • Section 6 · Adjacent Excavation — foundations dug within 3 metres of a neighbouring building (to any depth below their foundations) or within 6 metres (where the 45° rule is engaged).
  • Section 2 · Works to Existing Party Walls — applies where the extension connects to an existing party wall. The main sub-sections here are:
    • s.2(2)(f) — cutting into the party wall itself for any purpose (beams, padstones, damp-proof course)
    • s.2(2)(j) — cutting into the adjoining owner’s wall to insert flashing or other weatherproofing
    • s.2(2)(h) — cutting away parts of the adjoining owner’s wall or building that overhang your land or a party wall, to enable a vertical wall to be erected or raised

Section 1 and Section 6 require one month’s notice; Section 3 requires two months’. Where multiple notices apply, the longest notice period governs your start date.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

If your neighbour dissents and a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the complexity of the project — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

For a single adjoining owner, assuming no complications:

  • Day 0 — Notice(s) served. Section 6 and Section 1 need one month; Section 3 works need two
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: no Award is needed; works may start on the notice expiry date
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start once the notice period has elapsed
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 2–3 weeks to serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 3–5 weeks to agree and serve the Award

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent to an earlier start. This is common where neighbours are cooperative and the paperwork is in order.

Common Mistakes We See

  • “The extension doesn’t touch their wall, so it’s fine.” The trigger is usually the foundations, not the walls. Section 6 captures excavation within 3 metres, regardless of where the building above sits.
  • Serving Section 6 only when Section 3 also applies. If the extension roof flashes into the neighbour’s wall, or cuts beams into the party wall, Section 3 is engaged too — with its longer 2-month notice period.
  • Ignoring the depth of the neighbour’s foundations. Excavation goes below their foundations → Section 6(1). Shallower → often still caught by the 6-metre rule. Don’t assume.
  • Missing the side-return neighbour. Side-return extensions often involve a second adjoining owner whose foundations sit within 3 metres. Both neighbours need notices.
  • Starting before the notice period is up. Builders are ready, the client is impatient — but starting a day early turns a notice into a trespass.
  • Free templates that default to Section 3. Rear extensions are usually Section 6 first, not Section 3. Our Free Notice Generator selects the right sections for your project type.

Working With Your Neighbours

A notice landing on the doormat with no warning is the single biggest source of neighbour friction we see. Before you serve:

  • Tell them first. A five-minute conversation explaining what’s planned, when, and that the process is standard removes most of the anxiety.
  • Offer the Schedule of Condition route. For rear extensions especially, a pre-works SoC is strongly advisable — excavation vibration and temporary supports are the main sources of disputed damage claims.
  • Keep them updated during works, particularly during groundworks. Most complaints that escalate aren’t about the works themselves — they’re about feeling ignored.
  • Method statements matter. Where Section 6 applies, the neighbour is entitled to details of the excavation method, depth, and sequencing. Share them early.

Planning a rear or side extension? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
← Back to Project Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Almost always. Most rear extensions involve excavation within 3 metres of a neighbouring building (Section 6). A professional review of your plans will confirm which notices are needed and when.

The party wall itself may be clear — but Section 6 catches foundations within 3 metres of the neighbour’s building (or 6 metres, depending on depth). The depth and distance from the boundary are what matter, not whether the walls above touch.

No — you must wait the full notice period (1 month for Section 6, 2 months for Section 3) unless the adjoining owner gives written consent to an earlier start.

Section 6(1) applies to excavation within 3 metres that goes below the level of the neighbour’s foundations. Section 6(2) applies to excavation within 6 metres where an imaginary 45° line from the base of their foundations would be cut. Most rear extensions fall under 6(1); deep basements or piled foundations often trigger 6(2).

Usually yes, though they’re often served together. A Section 6 notice covers excavation; a Section 3 notice covers works to the party wall itself (flashing, beams, etc.); a Section 1 notice covers new walls on the line of junction. Serving them together is common practice.

Two to three months before works start. One month is the statutory notice for Section 6, plus 14 days for the response period, plus time to appoint surveyors and agree an Award if dissent arises. If your builder is ready next month, you’re tight.

Loft Conversions

Loft Conversions and the Party Wall Act

Loft conversions are one of the most common reasons we’re instructed in London. Almost every loft conversion in a terraced or semi-detached house touches the party wall in some way — whether it’s cutting in steels, raising the flank wall, or weathering a new roof into the neighbour’s. All of these are notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, and getting the paperwork right protects both you and your neighbour.

A loft conversion started without proper notice is one of the most common sources of disputes we’re called in to resolve — usually after works have already begun, which is exactly when it costs the most to fix.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

The main section engaged is Section 2 — the list of works a building owner may carry out to an existing party wall. For a typical loft conversion, the relevant sub-sections are:

  • s.2(2)(a) — raising the party wall to support the new floor or roof
  • s.2(2)(f) — cutting into the party wall to insert beams, padstones, or bearings (the steels carrying the new floor)
  • s.2(2)(j) — cutting in and lead-flashing a new roof abutment into the adjoining owner’s wall, where the design requires it
  • s.2(2)(n) — exposing a party wall previously enclosed, common when opening up the roof space

These are served by a Section 3 Party Structure Notice, which requires two months’ notice before works begin. If your conversion also involves excavation — for instance, underpinning to support a new staircase below — Section 6 may also apply, with its own one-month notice.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

If your neighbour dissents and a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the complexity of the project — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

For a single adjoining owner, assuming no complications:

  • Day 0 — Section 3 Notice served
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: no Award is needed; works may start on the notice expiry date (day 60)
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start once the notice period has elapsed (day 60)
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 2–3 weeks to serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 3–5 weeks to agree and serve the Award
  • Day 60 onwards: works may commence, provided any Award is in place

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the two-month notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent to an earlier start. This is common where neighbours are cooperative and the paperwork is in order.

For most loft conversions we handle, any Award is served well inside the two-month notice period — so the statutory clock, not the surveyor process, is usually the critical path.

Common Mistakes We See

  • “My builder said it’s fine.” Builders are not party wall surveyors. If the works touch the party wall, a notice is required — the Act doesn’t care what your builder thinks.
  • Serving too late. Starting the process six weeks before works leaves no margin. Serve as soon as drawings and a projected start date are ready.
  • Missing the flashing clause. DIY notices often forget s.2(2)(j). If your roofline changes, you almost certainly need it — and the Award will be defective without it.
  • Free online templates that don’t match the project. We routinely see notices citing the wrong sub-sections, or with works missing entirely. Our Free Notice Generator is built around the loft scenario and gets the sub-sections right.
  • Wrong owner’s name. Joint owners (e.g. husband and wife on the title) must both be served. Missing one invalidates the notice.
  • Combining works, noticing only some. If you’re doing a loft and removing a chimney breast, both need to appear in the notice.

Working With Your Neighbours

A notice landing on the doormat with no warning is the single biggest source of neighbour friction we see. Before you serve:

  • Tell them first. A five-minute conversation explaining what’s planned, when, and that the process is standard removes most of the anxiety.
  • Offer the Letter of Acknowledgement route where appropriate — it’s quicker, cheaper, and avoids a full Award where the neighbour is happy to consent.
  • Keep them updated during works. Most complaints that escalate aren’t about the works themselves — they’re about feeling ignored.
  • A Schedule of Condition protects both sides. If the adjoining owner doesn’t have one, suggest it: the cost is yours, and it prevents future arguments about pre-existing cracks.

Planning a loft conversion? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Most loft conversions involve cutting steel beams into the party wall (s.2(2)(f)) and raising the party wall height (s.2(2)(a)). Both are notifiable under the Act, and a Section 3 Notice with 2 months’ notice is required.

Inserting lead flashing is covered by s.2(2)(j) and must be included in your Section 3 Notice. Don’t omit it — it’s a common defect in DIY notices, and Awards built on defective notices are vulnerable to challenge.

It’s not strictly mandatory, but strongly recommended. A Schedule of Condition records the adjoining owner’s property before works begin, protecting both sides if damage is later alleged. Most disputes we see could have been avoided by a proper SoC.

After 14 days without a written response, the Act treats the silence as a deemed dissent. Surveyors must then be appointed — an Agreed Surveyor with the neighbour’s consent, or two separate surveyors if not. We handle this on your behalf.

You can — but most we see are missing sub-sections, have the wrong owner’s name, or cite the wrong section. Our Notice Generator is designed specifically around the loft scenario and gets the sub-sections right.

Three to four months before works start. Two months is the statutory notice, plus two to four weeks to agree an Award if dissent arises. If your builder is ready next month, you’re already late.

Chimney Breast Removals

Chimney Breast Removals and the Party Wall Act

Removing a chimney breast is one of the most frequently misunderstood party wall issues we encounter. The chimney breast almost always forms part of the party wall — even when it sits inside your house on your side of the plaster. Cutting it out is a notifiable work under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, and the chimney stack that remains above the roof affects both properties.

Chimney breast removals are also the project type we’re most often called in to fix after the fact — where works have started, cracks have appeared on the neighbour’s side, and there’s no notice, no Award, and no Schedule of Condition to fall back on.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

Chimney breast removals engage Section 2, specifically:

  • s.2(2)(g) — cutting away any chimney breast, jamb or flue from a party wall. This is the core notifiable sub-section for a breast removal.
  • s.2(2)(a) — where structural support is needed after removal, such as raising or adjusting the remaining party wall.
  • s.2(2)(f) — where steel beams or gallows brackets are cut into the party wall to support the chimney stack above.

These are served by a Section 3 Party Structure Notice, requiring two months’ notice before works begin. A chimney breast removal does not normally trigger Section 6 (adjacent excavation) unless the works go below ground level.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

If your neighbour dissents and a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the complexity of the project — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

For a single adjoining owner, assuming no complications:

  • Day 0 — Section 3 Notice served
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: no Award is needed; works may start on the notice expiry date (day 60)
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start once the notice period has elapsed (day 60)
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 2–3 weeks to serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 3–5 weeks to agree and serve the Award

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the two-month notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent to an earlier start. This is common for straightforward breast removals where the neighbour is cooperative and the method is agreed.

Common Mistakes We See

  • “It’s inside my house, so it’s not a party wall issue.” The chimney breast is almost always part of the party wall — even when it sits wholly within your property. The Act still applies.
  • Gallows brackets vs. through-beams. Many builders default to gallows brackets, which are often inadequate for larger stacks. Structural engineers frequently require through-beams — and cutting those into the party wall is a separate notifiable work under s.2(2)(f).
  • Forgetting the stack above. The chimney stack above roof level needs continuing support. If it serves the neighbour’s flues, the Award will set out conditions for maintaining it.
  • Removing both sides in sequence without notice. Where the neighbour has already removed theirs, you still need to serve notice for yours — each side’s removal is separately notifiable.
  • Missing Building Control. Chimney breast removal affects structural stability. You need Building Control approval and Party Wall compliance — they are separate processes running in parallel.
  • No Schedule of Condition. Vibrations from cutting travel through the party wall easily. Hairline cracks on the neighbour’s side are common. Without an SoC, proving what was there before is impossible.

Working With Your Neighbours

Chimney breast removals often create the cleanest disputes we see — cracks appearing on the neighbour’s side the day after works. Before you serve:

  • Tell them first. Chimney removals are short works (often under a week) but vibration-heavy. Warning them about noise and the odd week of disruption prevents most friction.
  • A Schedule of Condition is essential. Specifically on the neighbour’s side adjoining the breast — ceilings, cornices, decorative plasterwork. Document it before you start.
  • Share the method statement. Temporary propping, sequencing, stack support — the neighbour is entitled to understand how their half of the chimney will stay up.
  • Protect the stack. If the stack serves their flues, the Award will require a method for continuing that service — don’t improvise on site.

Removing a chimney breast? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — chimney breasts almost always form part of the party wall. Removing one engages s.2(2)(g) of the Act (cutting away a chimney breast, jamb or flue). A Section 3 Notice with 2 months’ notice is required.

If the stack serves the adjoining property’s flues, the Award will set out conditions for supporting and maintaining the shared stack. Structurally, the stack must remain stable after the breast below is removed — through-beams or gallows brackets are the usual solutions.

Yes — chimney breast removal affects structural stability. You need Building Control approval and Party Wall compliance. They’re separate processes and run in parallel.

That’s a structural engineering question, not a party wall one — but it often comes up. Gallows brackets suit smaller stacks; larger or tapered stacks usually need through-beams. Cutting through-beams into the party wall is notifiable under s.2(2)(f), so flag it in your notice.

Each side’s removal is separately notifiable. You still need to serve a Section 3 Notice, and the Award should address the current configuration of the shared stack and breast structure.

The works themselves are usually 3–7 days. The notice process is the same as any Section 3 matter: 2 months’ statutory notice, 14 days for the response window, 2–5 weeks to agree an Award if dissent arises. Plan for three months from notice to start.

Basement Conversions

Basement Conversions and the Party Wall Act

Basement conversions are among the most technically complex and highest-risk projects covered by the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. They almost always involve underpinning the party wall, deep excavation close to neighbouring foundations, and prolonged works with significant vibration and ground movement. The risk of damage — and of disputes — is higher than any other project type we handle.

Because of the risks involved, basements are also the project type where the statutory process matters most. A proper Party Wall Award sets out method statements, sequencing, monitoring, and insurance arrangements that protect both sides. Trying to start a basement without the full paperwork in place is the fastest route we know to an injunction.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

Basements typically engage multiple sections of the Act simultaneously:

  • Section 2(2)(a) — underpinning the party wall, extending it downwards to enclose the new basement space. This is the core notifiable work.
  • Section 6 · Adjacent Excavation — almost always engaged. Deep basement excavation triggers both the 3-metre rule (s.6(1)) and the 6-metre rule (s.6(2)) for neighbours on multiple sides.
  • Section 2(2)(f) — cutting into the party wall to insert beams or lintels, where needed for structural support of the remaining structure.
  • Section 1 · Line of Junction — where new retaining walls are built at the boundary.

Works under Section 2 are served by a Section 3 Notice requiring two months’ notice. Section 1 and Section 6 notices require one month. Multiple notices are usual, often served on more than one adjoining owner.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

In practice, full consent is rare for basement projects — adjoining owners almost always appoint a surveyor to review the method statements and monitor the works. Where a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the depth, neighbours involved, and engineering complexity — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

Basement timelines run longer than other project types because of the engineering review involved. For a single adjoining owner:

  • Day 0 — Section 3 and Section 6 Notices served (Section 3 sets the longer 2-month clock)
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: uncommon for basements; works may start on day 60
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start on day 60
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 4–6 weeks to review method statements and serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 6–10 weeks to agree the Award, longer where multiple neighbours are involved

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the two-month notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent — but for basements this is rare, because most neighbours want the Award in place first.

Multiple neighbours. Basements often involve two or three adjoining owners. Each has their own 14-day response window and, if dissenting, their own surveyor process — running in parallel. Start as early as you can.

Common Mistakes We See

  • Underestimating the risk. Basements aren’t “just excavation” — they’re the highest-risk work on the Act. Treat the process with the seriousness it deserves.
  • Starting excavation before the Award. Starting early under Section 6 without a Section 3 Award is a fast route to an injunction and retrospective liability.
  • Missing remote neighbours. The 6-metre rule under s.6(2) catches properties you might not think of as “adjoining” — particularly in dense London terraces. Don’t assume.
  • Inadequate method statements. Sequence of excavation, spoil removal, underpinning order — all need to be set out in detail. The Award will require them; prepare them early.
  • Monitoring not agreed. Movement monitoring, crack pins, and inspection regimes are standard. Skipping them invites disputes later.
  • Insurance gaps. Standard works insurance often excludes basement underpinning. Specific cover is usually required and the Award will specify it.

Working With Your Neighbours

Basements test neighbour relationships like no other project. Before you serve:

  • Tell them early and properly. Not a passing word at the bin store — a proper conversation explaining what’s planned, when, and what the process will look like.
  • Expect them to want a surveyor. For basement projects this is reasonable, not obstructive. Appoint yours early and offer the Agreed Surveyor route if the neighbour is willing.
  • A Schedule of Condition is essential. Not optional. Without one, damage claims become almost impossible to resolve fairly.
  • Share the programme and method. Engineers’ drawings, sequencing, working hours, access arrangements — all of this goes into the Award, so share it willingly.

Planning a basement conversion? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
← Back to Project Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Basement work almost always involves underpinning the party wall (Section 2) and excavating below the foundations of adjoining properties (Section 6) and often affecting multiple neighbours at once. The engineering complexity, duration on site, and risk of subsidence are all higher than any other project type.

Possibly — if the excavation could affect their stability, the surveyors may require protective underpinning as part of the Award. The Building Owner pays, and it’s treated as part of the enabling works for the basement.

Longer than simpler projects. With an Agreed Surveyor, typically 4–6 weeks to Award. With separate surveyors, 6–10 weeks. Basements with multiple neighbours take longer as each process runs in parallel. Start as early in your design programme as possible.

Yes — always. The surveyors review method statements and monitor the process, but the engineering design sits with your structural engineer. Most Awards specifically require engineer-signed sequences and monitoring regimes.

The Building Owner pays all reasonable surveyor fees, including the adjoining owner’s surveyor. For basement projects these fees can be substantial because of the engineering review required — please contact us for a fee estimate.

Standard works insurance usually excludes basement underpinning — specific cover is needed. The Award will typically require evidence of appropriate insurance before works start, and may specify minimum limits.

Underpinning

Underpinning and the Party Wall Act

Underpinning strengthens or lowers the foundations of an existing building. It comes up in three main contexts: as part of a basement conversion (extending the party wall downwards), as remedial work to address subsidence, and as enabling work for a deeper neighbouring excavation. In every case, underpinning a party wall is expressly notifiable under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 — and it’s one of the highest-risk works the Act covers.

Getting the sequence wrong — underpinning too long a section, or failing to support the remaining wall — can cause rapid and severe settlement on the neighbour’s side. The Award process exists precisely to agree method, sequence, and monitoring before anyone puts a spade in the ground.

Which Sections of the Act Apply

Underpinning engages two sections of the Act, almost always together:

  • Section 2(2)(a) — underpinning, thickening, or raising of a party wall. Expressly notifiable.
  • Section 6 · Adjacent Excavation — typically engaged by the depth of excavation required. The 3-metre rule under s.6(1) almost always applies because the underpinning goes below the existing foundation level.
  • Section 2(2)(f) — where temporary beams or structural supports are cut into the wall during the underpinning sequence.

Section 2 works are served by a Section 3 Notice, requiring two months’ notice. Section 6 requires one month. Both are typically served together.

Common underpinning methods — and all engage the Act:

  • Mass concrete (traditional pin-by-pin) — excavating in short bays beneath the existing foundation and casting concrete. Most common for basement conversions.
  • Mini-piled underpinning — small-diameter piles driven or bored to greater depths, with a reinforced beam connecting them. Used where mass concrete isn’t viable.
  • Beam-and-base underpinning — a reinforced concrete beam built under the existing foundation, transferring load to new bases. Used where settlement is localised.

Typical Costs in London

As the Building Owner, you’re responsible for all reasonable fees. Where your neighbour consents, our fixed fees are:

  • Option 1(a) · Consent£100 per owner for preparing and serving the Notice
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition£100 Notice + £400 per property for the Schedule of Condition (£500 total)

In practice, full consent is uncommon for underpinning works — adjoining owners almost always appoint a surveyor to review the method statements and monitoring regime. Where a Party Wall Surveyor is appointed (Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor or Option 3 · Separate Surveyors), fees depend on the method, depth, and engineering review involved — please contact us for a fee estimate. As the Adjoining Owner, your cost is £0 — the Act makes the Building Owner responsible for all reasonable fees.

Timeline — From Notice to Works

For a single adjoining owner, assuming no complications:

  • Day 0 — Section 3 and Section 6 Notices served (Section 3 sets the longer 2-month clock)
  • Days 1–14 — adjoining owner’s statutory window to consent, dissent, or appoint a surveyor
  • Option 1(a) · Consent: uncommon for underpinning; works may start on day 60
  • Option 1(b) · Consent + Schedule of Condition: SoC prepared; works may start on day 60
  • Option 2 · Agreed Surveyor: typically 3–5 weeks to review method statements and serve the Award
  • Option 3 · Separate Surveyors: typically 5–8 weeks to agree the Award, longer where multiple neighbours are involved

Starting earlier. Works can begin before the two-month notice period expires if the adjoining owner gives written consent — but for underpinning this is rare, because the method needs to be fully agreed before anyone wants to sign off the start.

Common Mistakes We See

  • Serving Section 6 only. Underpinning of the party wall itself is Section 2 work — a Section 6 notice alone is defective.
  • Method statement as an afterthought. Bay sequence, bay width, depth, timing between bays — all need to be agreed before works start. The Award will require them.
  • Monitoring not set up. Movement monitoring, crack pins, and inspection regimes are standard in underpinning Awards. Skipping them leaves you exposed to future damage claims.
  • Skipping the Schedule of Condition. Underpinning vibrations travel. Cracks on the neighbour’s side are common. Without an SoC, separating new damage from old becomes guesswork.
  • Wrong method for the soil. London clay, made ground, and variable fill all behave differently — a mass concrete method appropriate for one site can be inadequate for another. Engineering sign-off is essential.
  • Emergency underpinning without notice. Even urgent remedial work requires notice. If there’s a genuine safety emergency the Act has provisions, but don’t assume — get the notice in first wherever possible.

Working With Your Neighbours

Underpinning is invasive, long-duration, vibration-heavy work close to the neighbour’s foundations. Before you serve:

  • Tell them first. Underpinning is almost always part of a bigger project (usually a basement). Frame the conversation around the whole project, not just the notice.
  • Expect them to want a surveyor. This is reasonable for underpinning work. Appoint yours early and offer the Agreed Surveyor route where possible.
  • A Schedule of Condition is essential. Not optional. Movement from underpinning is often subtle but real — you need a baseline.
  • Share the programme and method. The neighbour is entitled to see how the underpinning will be sequenced, what propping is in place, and how movement is being monitored.

Planning underpinning works? Get a free project review — we’ll tell you exactly which notices you need before you spend anything.

Need to serve a notice for this type of work? Use our Free Notice Generator or download blank templates.
← Back to Project Review

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes — underpinning a party wall is expressly notifiable under s.2(2)(a). A Section 3 Notice with 2 months’ notice is required. Section 6 typically applies too because of the depth of excavation involved.

The Building Owner pays for all works they propose, including underpinning. If the underpinning is needed to protect the adjoining property from the Building Owner’s works, it’s included in the Award at the Building Owner’s cost.

The Award will typically require detailed method statements from a structural engineer covering bay sequencing, bay width, depth, propping, dewatering (if needed), and monitoring regimes. These must be agreed before works begin.

Mass concrete (pin-by-pin) excavates in short bays beneath the existing foundation and casts concrete — cheaper, simpler, common for basements. Mini-piled uses small-diameter piles connected by a reinforced beam — used where mass concrete isn’t viable (poor ground, deep founding, space constraints).

The Act does have provisions for urgent safety works, but they’re narrow. In practice we always recommend serving notice even for emergency works wherever there’s time — retrospective agreement is much harder than prospective.

Longer than simpler projects. With an Agreed Surveyor, typically 3–5 weeks to Award. With separate surveyors, 5–8 weeks. Factor in the engineering review time — method statements need to be prepared and agreed before any Award can be served.

Party Wall Surveyors

Your Surveyor

Our role under the Act — and how to choose a competent surveyor.

Our Role Under the Act

Under Section 10 of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, when a dispute arises, the matter must be resolved by party wall surveyors. Our surveyors hold MFPWS and MPTS accreditations. We act in three capacities:

Choosing a Competent Surveyor — Questions to Ask

Even if you decide not to appoint an Agreed Surveyor, it’s important the surveyor you choose is qualified, impartial, and available throughout the process.

A reliable surveyor doesn’t just issue an Award — they guide both owners, communicate clearly, and remain present until the works are complete. When deciding who to appoint, these are the questions to ask.

1

Qualifications & Experience

  • ?Are you a member of a recognised professional body such as the Faculty of Party Wall Surveyors (FPWS), RICS, or the Pyramus & Thisbe Society (MPTS)?
  • ?Do you regularly act for both Building Owners and Adjoining Owners?
  • ?Have you dealt with projects similar to my neighbour’s — extensions, lofts, or basement excavations?
  • ?Have you checked their online reviews or testimonials to see how they’ve handled previous clients?
2

Impartiality & Conduct

  • ?Will you confirm in writing that you act independently under Section 10 of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996?
  • ?Will you ensure fairness and keep communication open between both owners?
  • ?Do you explain the process clearly before any appointment and at each stage before an Award is made?

Tip: a good surveyor’s role is to balance both sides and prevent unnecessary delay or cost.

3

Communication & Support

  • ?How quickly do you respond to calls or emails?
  • ?Will I receive regular progress updates?
  • ?Will you remain available after the Award has been served if questions arise?
  • ?How long have you been practising under the Party Wall etc. Act, and will you remain contactable throughout the project — not just until the Award is issued?

Tip: a dependable surveyor doesn’t disappear once the paperwork is complete.

4

Fees & Transparency

  • ?Will you provide a written quotation before appointment and confirm that your fees will be reasonable and proportionate to the works involved?
  • ?Are your fees fixed or hourly, and what do they include (Schedule of Condition, Award, follow-up)?
  • ?Who normally pays your fees under the Act? (In most cases, the Building Owner.)
5

Professional Standards

  • ?Do you hold Professional Indemnity Insurance?
  • ?Do you follow recognised guidance such as the FPWS Best Practice Procedures, RICS Party Wall Guidance Notes, or the Pyramus & Thisbe Society Code of Practice?
  • ?Are your Awards explained in plain English so we, the owners, can clearly understand them?
  • ?Will you put all key advice and decisions in writing so there’s a clear record for both owners?
  • ?Will you explain the terms and the process as clearly as we have laid out here?

A Final Word

A competent surveyor safeguards both properties, keeps the process fair and transparent, and helps maintain good relations between neighbours.

Before making a choice, take a moment to read their reviews, speak to them directly, and trust your sense of who genuinely prioritises protecting your property and peace of mind.

“Choosing a surveyor is as much about trust as qualification — the right one will treat your property as if it were their own, while staying fair to both sides.”

We tick all of the above.

Need a Competent Party Wall Surveyor?

Free, impartial advice from FPWS-qualified surveyors based in Wimbledon, working across all 33 London boroughs.

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The Building Owner Surveyor

What Does the Building Owner's Surveyor Do?

As the building owner's appointed surveyor, we guide you through the entire party wall process. While appointed by you, we are required to act impartially. Our duties include: serving notices, reviewing drawings, carrying out a Schedule of Condition, negotiating with the adjoining owner's surveyor, and drafting the Party Wall Award.

Impartiality

Despite being appointed by the building owner, a party wall surveyor must act impartially. We ensure the adjoining owner's property is properly protected and the award is fair and balanced.

Fees

The building owner is responsible for all costs. We provide clear, competitive fixed-fee quotations at the outset.

Frequently Asked Questions

Timescales depend on your neighbour's response: if they consent, works can start the next day. With an Agreed Surveyor, typically 2–3 weeks. With two surveyors, typically 3–5 weeks. Complex projects with multiple neighbours can take longer.

No. You must not start notifiable works until the award has been served. Starting without an award can lead to an injunction and liability for damages.

If consent is given, no award is required. However, we strongly recommend still obtaining a Schedule of Condition to protect both parties.

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The Adjoining Owner Surveyor

What Does the Adjoining Owner's Surveyor Do?

If you have received a party wall notice and choose to dissent, you are entitled to appoint your own surveyor — and the building owner pays our fees. Our duties include: reviewing notices, assessing proposed works, carrying out a Schedule of Condition, negotiating safeguards, and reviewing and agreeing the Party Wall Award.

Independence

We act independently and impartially, working constructively with the building owner's surveyor to reach a fair resolution while ensuring your property is protected.

Costs

The building owner pays the adjoining owner's surveyor fees. Appointing us typically costs you nothing.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. You can consent to the works. However, if you dissent or do not respond, the Act requires surveyor appointment. Even with consent, we recommend a Schedule of Condition.

A surveyor cannot stop works outright. Our role is to ensure appropriate safeguards are in place. Breaches of the award can be enforced through the courts.

The Schedule of Condition provides the evidence base. The surveyor can determine responsibility and require the building owner to make good.

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The Agreed Surveyor

What Is an Agreed Surveyor?

An agreed surveyor is a single party wall surveyor appointed by both parties to act impartially. Benefits include: quicker decisions, cheaper (one fee instead of two), simpler communication, and statutory impartiality.

When Not Suitable

An agreed surveyor may not be suitable for particularly complex works, pre-existing disputes between parties, where the adjoining owner requires independent representation, or where multiple adjoining owners have different concerns.

Frequently Asked Questions

Both parties must agree in writing. Typically, the building owner proposes and the adjoining owner accepts. If they decline, each party appoints their own surveyor instead.

Yes. The agreed surveyor has a statutory duty of impartiality. Either party can appeal the award to the County Court within 14 days.

The building owner pays. Since there is only one surveyor, total costs are typically lower than the two-surveyor route.

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Schedule of Condition

What Is a Schedule of Condition?

A comprehensive record of an adjoining property's existing state before any works commence. It protects both sides: the building owner against false claims, and the adjoining owner by providing clear evidence of pre-works condition.

What the Survey Covers

Internal: room-by-room assessment of walls, ceilings, floors. External: elevations, brickwork, roofline, boundaries. All with high-resolution photographs cross-referenced to written observations.

Drones are used where required.

How It Is Used

Appended to the Party Wall Award. If damage is alleged after works, the schedule provides the objective baseline for comparison.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not strictly mandatory in every case, but strongly recommended and standard practice. Most professional surveyors consider it essential.

This is noted in the award. It may weaken their position if they later claim damage was caused by the works.

Typically 30 to 45 minutes, depending on the size of the property and the areas to be recorded.

The Schedule of Condition should always be completed before works begin. The timing depends on which option the Adjoining Owner chooses:

  • Option 1(a) — Consent, no surveyor: A Schedule of Condition is not required.
  • Option 1(b) — Consent with SoC: The Adjoining Owner requests a Schedule of Condition. It is carried out after consent is given but before works start.
  • Options 2 and 3 — Surveyors appointed: The Schedule of Condition becomes part of the formal process. It is undertaken after notices are served and before the Party Wall Award is issued.

In every case, the survey must be completed before any building work begins on site.

The building owner pays, included in our fixed-fee quotation.

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Your Guide

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996

Everything you need to know about your rights and obligations under the Act.

Understanding the Act

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 provides a framework for preventing and resolving disputes in relation to party walls, boundary walls, and excavations near neighbouring buildings.

The Act covers three main areas: work on an existing party wall (Section 2), building new walls on or astride a boundary (Section 1), and excavation within specified distances of neighbouring buildings (Section 6).

Free Tools & Templates

We provide free notice templates, letters of appointment, and a notice generator. Visit our Tools & Templates page.

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The Act

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996

The Act came into force on 1 July 1997 and applies to England and Wales. It provides a framework for preventing and resolving disputes about party walls, boundary walls, and excavations near neighbouring buildings.

When Does the Act Apply?

  • Section 1: Building new walls on or astride the boundary
  • Section 2: Works to existing party walls (cutting into, raising, lowering, demolishing, underpinning)
  • Section 6: Excavation within 3m (below neighbour's foundations) or 6m (45-degree line)

Three Types of Notice

  • Section 1 Notice: New boundary walls — 1 month
  • Section 3 Notice: Existing party walls — 2 months
  • Section 6 Notice: Excavations — 1 month

Key Principles

Notice before works, right to appoint surveyors, impartial dispute resolution, legally binding award, and right of appeal to the County Court.

Free Notice Templates

Download Section 1, 3, and 6 notice templates or generate one automatically.

TemplatesGenerator
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Frequently Asked Questions

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 came into force on 1 July 1997 and applies to England and Wales.

No — Scotland and Northern Ireland have their own separate legislation covering similar matters.

Yes — under Section 10(17), either owner can appeal to the County Court within 14 days of being served the Award. The court can rescind, modify, or affirm the Award.

Notices

Section 1 — Line of Junction Notice

Required when building a new wall on the boundary. Must be served at least one month before works. Must describe the wall, its position, and whether it will be built wholly on your land or astride the boundary.

Section 3 — Party Structure Notice

Covers works to existing party walls: cutting into, raising, reducing, demolishing, underpinning, inserting DPC. Must be served at least two months before works.

Section 6 — Adjacent Excavation Notice

Required for excavation within 3 metres (below neighbour's foundations) or 6 metres (45-degree line). Must be served at least one month before works, with plans showing depth and any proposed underpinning.

Notice Periods

  • Section 1: 1 month
  • Section 3: 2 months
  • Section 6: 1 month

How to Respond

14 days to respond in writing: consent, dissent and appoint a surveyor, or consent subject to conditions. No response = deemed dissent.

→ Received a notice? Read our step-by-step guide for adjoining owners

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Frequently Asked Questions

Three: Section 1 Notice (new walls at the boundary, 1 month), Section 3 Notice / Party Structure Notice (works to existing party walls, 2 months), and Section 6 Notice (adjacent excavations, 1 month).

Only if the recipient has agreed in writing to accept service by email and has provided a valid email address. Otherwise, serve by hand or recorded delivery post.

A dispute is deemed to have arisen and surveyors must be appointed under Section 10. Silence does not stop the process — it moves into dispute resolution.

Statutory Reference

The Surveyors

How surveyors are appointed under Section 10 of the Act.

When Are Surveyors Needed?

When a dispute arises — i.e. an Adjoining Owner dissents or fails to respond within 14 days — surveyors must be appointed under Section 10 of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.

Agreed Surveyor

Both parties appoint a single impartial surveyor. Fastest and most cost-effective.

Two-Surveyor Appointment

Each party appoints their own. The two work together. If they cannot agree, they refer to the Third Surveyor.

Third Surveyor

Selected in advance by the two appointed surveyors. Acts as referee if needed.

Duties Under the Act

Acting impartially, inspecting the site, preparing the Schedule of Condition, negotiating, drafting and serving the Award, and dealing with subsequent disputes.

Fees

Typically paid by the Building Owner. We provide clear fixed-fee quotations upfront — see our Fees & Process page for full details.

Looking to appoint a surveyor? For guidance on choosing a competent surveyor — and the questions to ask before you appoint one — see our Your Surveyor page.

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Schedule of Condition

What Is a Schedule of Condition?

A detailed record of the adjoining property's state before notifiable works begin. Creates an objective baseline for assessing damage claims. Appended to the Party Wall Award.

Best Practice

Not technically mandatory but strongly recommended and standard practice. Most surveyors consider it essential.

What It Covers

  • Rooms and areas closest to the proposed notifiable works
  • External elevations, facing and near the works
  • Roof structures and chimney stacks (for loft conversions or works related to roofs)
  • Garden walls, boundary walls, outbuildings
  • Basements and cellars (excavation cases)

How It Is Prepared

Room-by-room inspection with high-resolution photographs cross-referenced to written observations.

Drones are used where required. The report forms an appendix to the Award.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Not strictly mandatory in every case, but strongly recommended and standard practice. Most professional surveyors consider it essential — it's the key evidence if damage is later alleged.

After the Party Wall Award has been agreed but before any works begin. This captures the exact state of the adjoining property as the baseline for comparison.

The building owner pays. The cost is typically included in the surveyor's overall fixed fee for the project.

An Award

What Is a Party Wall Award?

The formal legal document produced by the appointed surveyor(s) that resolves the dispute and sets out how works are to be carried out.

What Does It Contain?

  • Names and addresses of parties and surveyors
  • Description of notifiable works
  • Drawings and specifications
  • Schedule of Condition
  • Permitted working hours and days
  • Access arrangements
  • Protective measures
  • Provisions for making good damage
  • Fee apportionment

Legally Binding

Binding on both parties and their successors in title. Non-compliance can lead to injunctions and damages claims.

The 14-Day Appeal Period

Either party may appeal to the County Court within 14 days. The court can rescind or modify the award. Appeals are uncommon. If no appeal is lodged, the award becomes final.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Generally 12 months from the date of service. If works haven't begun within that period, the Award lapses and a fresh notice and Award process is usually required.

Yes — the surveyors can issue an addendum or further Award if circumstances change, additional damage is discovered, or new issues arise during construction.

No — they are completely separate. Planning permission addresses local authority concerns about design and land use. A Party Wall Award addresses your private legal duties to neighbouring owners under the Act.

Jargon Busted

Every term you might encounter in a Party Wall Notice, Award, or correspondence — explained in plain English. Click any term to expand.

The legislation that provides a legal framework for building works near or on a boundary, shared wall, or adjoining structure. It sets out rights and duties for both Building Owners and Adjoining Owners.

The legal owner of a property next to or near the Building Owner's property. This includes freeholders, leaseholders (with leases over one year), or anyone with a registered interest affected by the works.

A single impartial surveyor appointed jointly by both the Building Owner and Adjoining Owner under Section 10(1)(a) of the Act. The Agreed Surveyor acts fairly for both sides and prepares the Party Wall Award.

The formal document issued by the Agreed Surveyor when acting for both owners — the same as an Award but produced by a single impartial surveyor.

Under the Act, the Building Owner (and their contractor) may have rights of access to the Adjoining Owner's property to carry out the works, provided proper notice is given and protections are in place.

Either owner may appeal an Award to the County Court within 14 days of it being served. Appeals must relate to a point of law, not personal preference.

A legally binding document prepared by the appointed surveyor(s). It sets out how and when the works can be carried out, access arrangements, protective measures, responsibilities for making good any damage, and rights of both owners. It is similar in effect to a contract between both parties.

The person (or company) carrying out the proposed building works. They are legally responsible for serving Notices and covering surveyor fees under the Act.

A post-works visit (if required) to confirm whether any damage has occurred and whether reinstatement is satisfactory.

When the Adjoining Owner agrees in writing to the works described in the Notice. No surveyor involvement is required unless the Adjoining Owner separately requests a Schedule of Condition.

A formal response served by the Adjoining Owner requesting modifications to the works (e.g., additional strengthening or other measures). It must be served within one month of the original Notice.

When the Adjoining Owner does not consent to the Notice. This does not mean a personal disagreement — it simply triggers the statutory procedure for appointing surveyor(s) to act impartially under the Act.

Defined by the Act as arising only when a Dissent is expressed or implied (i.e., no reply within 14 days). It is not personal conflict — simply a trigger for the statutory surveyor process.

Under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 (Electronic Communications) Order 2016, Notices and correspondence may be served by email with written consent.

When a Building Owner makes use of an existing wall built by the Adjoining Owner (for example, a party wall previously constructed astride the boundary), they may be required to pay a fair contribution towards its cost.

Under the Act, the Building Owner usually covers all reasonable surveyor fees and costs, including preparation of the Award and Schedule of Condition.

The boundary line dividing two pieces of land. The Act regulates how new walls may be built on or up to this line.

Applies when a Building Owner wishes to build a new wall at or astride the boundary line between two properties. The Notice must be served at least one month before works begin.

Restoring any part of the Adjoining Owner's property that may be damaged as a result of the works, to its original condition or an equivalent standard.

A boundary wall (not part of a building) built astride the boundary line and used to separate two properties — often a garden wall made of masonry, not timber.

Includes floors, ceilings, and other structural elements separating parts of buildings belonging to different owners (e.g., flats).

A wall that separates two properties belonging to different owners and forms part of a building. The Building Owner must serve a Notice at least two months before cutting into, raising, or otherwise working on this wall.

A wall that stands on the land of two or more owners and forms part of a building. Common examples: shared walls between semi-detached or terraced houses.

Insurance that protects both parties in the unlikely event that a surveyor makes an error or omission while acting under the Act.

A written and photographic record describing the condition of the Adjoining Owner's property before works begin. It protects both parties should any damage occur later.

Relates to excavations or foundations within 3 or 6 metres of an Adjoining Owner's structure, depending on depth. A Notice must include plans and sections of the proposed works and be served at least one month before excavation begins.

If an Adjoining Owner fails to reply within the statutory time, the Building Owner may appoint a surveyor on their behalf so that the process can move forward lawfully.

A financial sum (held on account) that the Adjoining Owner can request before works begin, to cover possible costs of unfinished work or making good damage.

The legal delivery of a Notice to the Adjoining Owner — can be by hand, post, or email (if consented). The date of service starts the 14-day response period.

A person appointed under Section 10 of the Act to act impartially for both owners. They do not represent the person who appointed them — their duty is to the Act itself.

The authority given to surveyors under Section 10 to determine any matter connected with works covered by the Act, including damage, timing, access, and costs.

Under the Act, both freeholders and leaseholders (with leases longer than one year) may have rights as “owners.” Notifying all qualifying owners is a legal requirement.

A reserve surveyor chosen by the two appointed surveyors. If the two surveyors cannot agree on any matter, the Third Surveyor makes the final determination.

The Building Owner must serve Notice at least: 1 month before Section 1 works (new wall on boundary), 2 months before Section 3 works (party wall works), and 1 month before Section 6 works (adjacent excavation).

Once an Adjoining Owner has dissented and surveyors have been appointed, the process must continue to completion — it cannot be withdrawn mid-way without agreement of both parties and the surveyor(s).

Need to serve or respond to a notice?

Use our free templates or generate a notice automatically.

TemplatesNotice Generator
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For Adjoining Owners

Received a Party Wall Notice?
Here's What Happens Next.

A plain-English guide to your options, the process, and what’s included — written for adjoining owners.

First — The Basics

The formal Party Wall process and the involvement of surveyors can only take place once Party Wall Notices are served. If you’ve received a Notice, the Act exists to protect you — and to make sure the works next door happen fairly.

Key Term

Building Owner

The owner(s) proposing to carry out the building works.

Key Term

Adjoining Owner

The neighbouring owner(s) whose property may be affected by those works. That’s you.

The Three Key Stages

However the process unfolds, these are the stages you’ll hear about.

01

Serving Party Wall Notices

This step triggers the whole process. Building Owners are legally responsible for preparing and serving Notices on neighbours whose properties may be affected. Building Owners often ask a Party Wall Surveyor to prepare and serve them on their behalf — and it’s essential that Notices are valid and properly served. An invalid Notice can waste time and restart the clock.

02

Schedule of Condition

A pre-works condition survey of the parts of your property that may be at risk or close to the proposed works. It documents the current condition of your property — a reference point — and the report is usually appended to the Party Wall Award so if anything goes wrong later, everyone knows exactly what was there before.

03

The Party Wall Award

A legal document served on all parties. It sets out the scope, rights, and timings of the works, and clearly defines each party’s responsibilities. The Award typically includes plans, schedules, and the Schedule of Condition — and it protects both the Building Owner and the Adjoining Owner.

Your Options When Notices Are Served

You have 14 days to respond. You can either consent or dissent.

Option A

Consent to the Notices

No Party Wall Surveyor is involved. Within this route you have two sub-options:

1 (a)

Simple Consent

You consent. No surveyor is involved. No survey of your property is carried out.

1 (b)

Consent + Schedule of Condition

You consent but request a Schedule of Condition — carried out by a surveyor (not a Party Wall Surveyor) as a reference point for your property. A report goes to both owners. Any issues are handled directly between you and your neighbour.

Important: both consent options can only be chosen within the first 14 days.

Option B

Dissent to the Notices

A surveyor is involved. A Schedule of Condition and report are prepared by default, and a formal Award is served on both sides. You can choose how surveyors are appointed:

2 (a)

Agreed Surveyor

One surveyor represents both sides. Fastest and most cost-effective.

2 (b)

Separate Surveyors

Two surveyors are appointed — each side has its own, and they work together throughout.

What's the difference between Option 1(b) and Option 2?

Option 1(b): A Schedule of Condition is prepared and given to both sides. No Party Wall Surveyor is involved — any issues are handled directly between the owners.

Option 2: A Party Wall Surveyor is involved to guide and mediate throughout the entire process.

If you don’t respond: after the initial Notice, a 10-day reminder letter can be served by the Building Owner’s surveyor. If that expires, they can appoint a surveyor on your behalf — and it’ll be a surveyor of their choice, not yours.

Good news: the surveyor’s fee is paid by the owner carrying out the building works — not you.

What’s Included When We Act as The Surveyors

When we’re appointed as the Adjoining Owner’s surveyor, here’s what you get:

  • Reviewing designs and discussing implications
  • Reviewing the served Notices
  • Liaising with Building Owners or their surveyors
  • Conducting a Schedule of Condition of your property
  • Reviewing and sharing the Schedule of Condition report
  • Preparing the Party Wall Award

Ready to appoint us?

Let’s take it forward.

Appoint us as your Adjoining Owner’s Surveyor in 2 minutes — the Building Owner pays our fees, not you. Or download a blank template to fill manually.

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Got a Notice? Let’s Sort It Out Together.

Free, friendly advice. Surveyor’s fee paid by the building owner — not you.

Need to respond to a notice? Download our free Response Form.
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For Building Owners

Planning Works?
Here’s the Process & Our Fees.

A plain-English guide to the Party Wall process, your responsibilities, and transparent fixed fees — so you can budget with confidence.

First — How Our Fees Work

Our fee structure ensures that the owners proposing the works only pay for services actually carried out by a Party Wall Surveyor. The final fee depends on how your neighbours (Adjoining Owners) respond.

When you carry out works under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, your neighbours must be formally notified. Each property may have more than one Owner (e.g. leaseholder + freeholder, sometimes including a management company) — which affects the number of Notices and the fee.

The process is really about your neighbour’s choices and which option they take.

The Party Wall Process — Step by Step

Every Party Wall job follows the same three stages.

01

Preparing & Serving Notices

This starts the whole process. Notices must be served on every affected neighbour — that includes leaseholders, freeholders, and management companies. You can serve Notices yourself, or appoint us to prepare and serve them for you. Getting this right is critical: invalid Notices waste time and restart the clock.

02

Schedule of Condition

A surveyor records your neighbour’s property condition before works start. This acts as a reference point — so if anyone later claims damage, it’s easy to see exactly what was there before. Protects both sides.

03

The Party Wall Award

A legal document confirming how and when the works will be carried out. Required whenever a surveyor is appointed. It protects both sides and ensures the works are regulated under the Act. Plans and the Schedule of Condition are typically attached.

Neighbour Response — Options & Fees

Your final fee depends on which route your neighbours choose. All fees shown are fixed — no hidden extras.

Option 1(a) · Consent

Neighbour agrees — no surveyor needed

The cleanest outcome. Your neighbour consents to the works and no survey is required. Works can start the very next day.

1 Owner

£100

2 Owners

£200

3 Owners

£300

4 Owners

£400

Per Notice, per Owner. Amendments or additional Notices: £60 each.

Option 1(b) · Consent + Survey

Neighbour agrees but requests a Schedule of Condition

Your neighbour consents but wants a survey of their property before works start — as a reference point in case damage is later claimed. No Party Wall Surveyor is involved; issues are handled directly between owners.

1 Owner

£500

2 Owners

£1,000

3 Owners

£1,500

4 Owners

£2,000

Schedule of Condition £300 + Notice £100 per owner.

Most Recommended
Option 2 · Dissent (Agreed Surveyor)

One surveyor represents both sides

Both parties use the same surveyor — fastest and most cost-effective route when a surveyor is required. We prepare the Schedule of Condition and the Party Wall Award and guide everyone through.

1 Owner

£1,200

2 Owners

£1,700

3 Owners

£2,200

4 Owners

£2,700

Discounted rates: We offer reduced fees on Agreed Surveyor appointments subject to T&Cs — no more than 5 hours spent; invoice settled within 7 days of presentation; a Google review posted within 14 days of Award service.

Option 3 · Dissent (Separate Surveyors)

Each side appoints its own surveyor

Two surveyors work together to agree the Schedule of Condition and Award. As the Building Owner you pay both surveyors’ fees — yours and your neighbour’s.

1 Owner

£800

2 Owners

£1,350

3 Owners

£1,900

4 Owners

£2,450

Building Owner Surveyor fee. The Adjoining Owner’s surveyor fee is separate and also paid by the Building Owner — see below.

AO Surveyor — Fixed Fee

£995

per AO

If the Adjoining Owner appoints us as their surveyor under Option 3, the fee is a flat £995 per Adjoining Owner — payable by you (the Building Owner) under Section 11 of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.

The 14-Day Rule

Option 1 must be chosen by the neighbour within 14 days of the Notice being served. If no response is received, a dispute is automatically deemed to exist — then only Options 2 or 3 are available. A reminder letter can be sent giving 10 additional days; if there’s still no response, only Option 3 remains.

Option 1(b) vs Option 2 — what’s the difference?

1(b): Schedule of Condition is prepared — no Party Wall Surveyor involved. Issues handled directly between the owners.

Option 2: A Party Wall Surveyor is involved to guide and mediate throughout the process.

Timescales

How quickly you can start works depends on which option your neighbour takes.

Option 1(a)

Works can start the next day. The process finishes when the neighbour provides consent.

Option 1(b)

Works can start once the Schedule of Condition report has been shared with both parties.

Option 2

Typically 2–3 weeks to complete the full process.

Option 3

Typically 3–5 weeks. Can take longer if the other side’s owner or surveyor doesn’t engage promptly.

Extras & Additional Charges

  • ·Post-work visits: £200 each (if requested — typically not undertaken).
  • ·Boundary disputes and extra-time projects are not included in the fees above.
  • ·Additional time: projects requiring significantly more time than usual (5–7 hours is typical) may incur additional charges.
  • ·Hourly rate: £195 per hour beyond what’s included.

What’s Included When We Act as The Surveyors

When we’re appointed as your (Building Owner) or Agreed Surveyor, here’s what you get:

  • Reviewing designs and discussing implications
  • Preparing and serving Notices (from Land Registry details)
  • Liaising with Adjoining Owners or their surveyors
  • Conducting the Schedule of Condition survey
  • Preparing and sharing the Schedule of Condition report
  • Preparing and serving the Party Wall Award

Once You Confirm the Fee

It’s our firm’s policy to make sure you’re comfortable with the fee before we go any further. Once confirmed, these are the main stages:

  1. 1Appointment of the Surveyor — in writing. We’ll send you instructions on exactly how to do this.
  2. 2Prepare and Serve Notices on the Adjoining Owners, if not already served.
  3. 3Arrange and carry out the Schedule of Condition. A report is prepared where required.
  4. 4Party Wall Award served on all owners, with plans and the Schedule of Condition attached.

A friendly tip

Talking to your neighbours directly about party wall matters — before Notices land on the doormat — can reduce costs and speed up the whole process. Neighbours are often happy to agree to your chosen surveyor as the Agreed Surveyor, or to propose their own preferred surveyor for mutual agreement.

Ready to appoint us?

Let’s take it forward.

Sign your Letter of Appointment online in 2 minutes — or download a blank template to fill manually.

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Planning Works? Get a Free Quote.

Fixed fees, no hidden extras. We confirm everything in writing before we start.

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Statutory Reference

Types of Works Under the Act

Every statutory right, every notice type, every common project — in one place.

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 gives building owners specific statutory rights to carry out works that affect neighbouring properties. Every right sits under Section 1 (new walls at the boundary), Section 2 (works to existing party structures), or Section 6 (adjacent excavations).

↓ Browse all 25 statutory rights

Common Project Types

Click a project to highlight the works it typically engages:

Section 1

New Walls at the Boundary

Section 2

Works to Existing Party Structures

Section 6

Adjacent Excavations

Not Sure Which Works Apply?

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Free Resources

Tools & Templates

Free party wall resources to help you understand the process, check your obligations, and get started.

What’s Available

Unlike most firms, we provide free online tools so you can understand the process before you instruct anyone.

Free Notice Templates

Download blank templates for Section 1, Section 3, Section 6 notices and the Response Form.

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Notice Generator

Our guided wizard drafts your party wall notice automatically in four steps.

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Letters of Appointment

Formally appoint your surveyor online — fill in, sign digitally, or send via email.

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Do I Need a Notice?

Quick quiz to check if the Party Wall Act applies to your building works.

Check Now →

Blog & FAQs

Practical answers to the questions we hear most often, in plain English.

Read →

Jargon Busted

35+ party wall terms explained in plain English.

Browse →

Need Help With the Process?

Our surveyors can guide you through every stage — completely free.

Get Free Advice

Free Notice Templates

Download Templates

Free templates to serve or respond to notices. We recommend professional advice before serving any notice.

⭐ Typically Used9
Project

Loft Conversion

Single S3 covering raise + cut into + flashing + incidental + expose.

Project

Loft with Chimney

Loft conversion with chimney breast cut-away.

Bundle

Rear Extension — S1(5) + S6(1)

New wall on own land + adjacent excavation. Two-page bundle.

Bundle

Rear Extension — S1(2) + S6(1)

New wall astride boundary + adjacent excavation. Two-page bundle.

2(2)(g)

Chimney Breast Removal

Cut away projecting chimney breast from the party wall (clause g).

2(2)(f)

Damp Proof Course

Cut into the party structure for a DPC.

2(2)(a)

Raise Party Structure

Raise the party structure (loft, extension upwards etc.).

2(2)(n)

Expose Party Wall

Expose a party wall hitherto enclosed (provide adequate weathering).

Response

Acknowledgement / Response Form

For the AO to consent (1a/1b), agree to an Agreed Surveyor (2), or appoint own (3).

Section 1 Notices2
S1(2)

Section 1(2) — Astride Boundary

New wall built astride the boundary, requires neighbour consent. Includes Section 1(4) Consent / Dissent on page 2.

S1(5)

Section 1(5) — On Own Land

New wall placed wholly on own land at the line of junction. Notice only.

Section 3 Notices37

Blank Generic

Blank

Blank Generic (with Examples)

Blank S3 with seven dotted lines for your own works wording. Page 2 lists typical examples for clauses (a)–(n).

Single Clause (Section 2(2))

2(2)(a) — Underpin / Thicken / Raise

Raise Party Structure

Raise Party Fence Wall

Raise External Wall

Underpin Party Structure

Underpin Party Fence Wall

Underpin External Wall

Thicken Party Structure

Thicken Party Fence Wall

Thicken External Wall

2(2)(b) — Make Good / Repair / Rebuild

Make Good Party Structure

Make Good Party Fence Wall

Repair Party Structure

Repair Party Fence Wall

Demolish & Rebuild Party Structure

Demolish & Rebuild Party Fence Wall

2(2)(c) — Demolish Non-Conforming Partition

Demolish Non-Conforming Partition

2(2)(d) — Buildings over Public Way

Demolish & Rebuild Building over Public Way

2(2)(e) — Insufficient Strength / Height

Demolish & Rebuild for Strength or Height

2(2)(f) — Cut Into Party Structure

Cut Into for Beams

Cut Into for Flashing

Cut Into for Damp Proof Course

2(2)(g) — Cut Away from Party Wall

Cut Away Footing

Cut Away Chimney Breast

Cut Away Jamb

Cut Away Flue

Cut Away Other Projection

2(2)(h) — Cut Away Overhanging Parts

Cut Away Overhanging Parts

2(2)(j) — Cut Into AO's Wall for Flashing

Cut Into AO's Wall for Flashing

2(2)(k) — Other Incidental Works

Other Incidental Works

2(2)(l) — Raise / Rebuild Party Fence Wall

Raise Party Fence Wall

Raise Party Fence Wall as Party Wall

Demolish & Rebuild as Party Fence Wall

Demolish & Rebuild as Party Wall

2(2)(m) — Reduce / Rebuild to Lower Height

Reduce Party Wall Height

Demolish & Rebuild to Lower Height

2(2)(n) — Expose Party Wall

Expose Party Wall

Section 6 Notices2
S6(1)

Section 6(1) — 3m Excavation

Excavation within 3 metres of the AO building going deeper than its foundations.

S6(2)

Section 6(2) — 6m Excavation

Excavation within 6 metres meeting the 45-degree plane drawn from the AO foundations.

Rear Extension Bundles4

S1(5) + S6(1)

On own land + adjacent excavation. 2-page bundle.

S1(2) + S6(1)

Astride boundary + adjacent excavation. 2-page bundle.

S1(5) + S6(1) + S3 — Cut Away PW

On own land + excavation + cut-away. 3-page bundle.

S1(2) + S6(1) + S3 — Cut Away PW

Astride + excavation + cut-away. 3-page bundle.

Other Project Types8

Loft Conversion

S3 covering raise / cut-into / flashing / incidental / expose.

Loft with Chimney

Loft + chimney breast cut-away.

Chimney Removal

Cut away a chimney breast from the party wall.

Flashing into Party Wall

Cut into the party structure for flashing.

Flashing into AO's Wall

Cut into the AO's wall for flashing.

Damp Proof Course

Cut into the party structure for a DPC.

Cut Structural Wall

Cut away a structural wall + incidental works.

Repair Party Fence Wall

Repair / rebuild a party fence wall.

Response Form1
Response

Acknowledgement / Response Form

Single-page response with all four options (1(a) consent, 1(b) consent + SoC, 2 Agreed Surveyor, 3 Own Surveyor), YES/NO toggles, signature block.

Letters of Appointment

Formally appoint your surveyor under the Act. Fill online, download, or email.

Fill Online & Sign

Complete the form on screen, draw your signature, and submit. Both you and the surveyor receive a copy instantly.

Download & Upload

Download a blank template, print it, fill in your details and sign by hand, then upload the signed copy back to us.

Send via Email

Enter your details, we pre-fill the appointment letter, and your email app opens ready to send. Quick and simple.

← Back to Tools & Templates

Guided Wizard

Free Notice Generator

Draft your party wall notice in four steps — no surveyor knowledge required.

1
2
3
4

What are you planning to build?

Pick the project that best matches your proposed works. We'll use this to suggest the statutory rights that usually apply.

Which works will you carry out?

These are the statutory rights typically engaged by your project. Tick every one that applies — and for alternatives (marked Either / Or), pick one.

Project details

We'll merge these into your notice draft. All fields are used only in your browser — nothing is sent anywhere.

Your draft notice

Review your drafts below. You can save as PDF, email them to yourself, or ask us to serve them professionally on your behalf.

Important: This is a draft only. Notices must be accurately completed and properly served to be valid under the Act. We strongly recommend that a qualified party wall surveyor reviews any notice before service.
Have us serve it →

Insights & Advice

Questions & Quick Answers

Practical guidance on the Party Wall Act, notices, surveyors, and common questions.

Latest Articles

Answers to the questions we hear most often.

Date

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Real Google Reviews

★★★★★   150+ Five-Star Reviews

Trusted by homeowners, developers, architects, and housing associations across London.

★★★★★

“Tim has been great from start to finish, with excellent communication throughout the process. I couldn’t recommend highly enough!”

— Peter Moorhead

★★★★★

“Tim was just what we needed. Efficient, helpful and knowledgable. He made it a very smooth process. Would highly recommend.”

— Isabelle Le Riche

★★★★★

“I would highly recommend Tim. He was a fantastic help to ensure that I got the outcome I was after. 10/10”

— Dan Gray

★★★★★

“Very good quality of service and helped through beyond party wall needs. Knowledgable and highly recommended.”

— Rajasankar R.

★★★★★

“Excellent service from Tim — very accommodating and supportive throughout. I would highly recommend.”

— Karen Hayles

★★★★★

“Tim was very supportive and offered professional advice which helped us to resolve the issues quickly. Thank you.”

— Dianne Friday

★★★★★

“Tim was exceptionally helpful in providing prompt and insightful advice on a time-sensitive matter.”

— Paul Arthur

★★★★★

“Excellent work by Tim Haq in preparing and organising party wall notices. Very helpful, prompt and efficient.”

— Richard Parry

★★★★★

“Tim was great; very responsive, reassuring and patient in his guidance. Highly recommended.”

— Simon Wongsuwarn

★★★★★

“An absolute pleasure to work with. 10/10. Cannot recommend enough! Very helpful and informative.”

— Hanifa Islam

★★★★★

“Tim has been great from start to finish, with excellent communication throughout the process. I couldn’t recommend highly enough!”

— Peter Moorhead

★★★★★

“Tim was just what we needed. Efficient, helpful and knowledgable. He made it a very smooth process. Would highly recommend.”

— Isabelle Le Riche

★★★★★

“I would highly recommend Tim. He was a fantastic help to ensure that I got the outcome I was after. 10/10”

— Dan Gray

★★★★★

“Very good quality of service and helped through beyond party wall needs. Knowledgable and highly recommended.”

— Rajasankar R.

★★★★★

“Excellent service from Tim — very accommodating and supportive throughout. I would highly recommend.”

— Karen Hayles

★★★★★

“Tim was very supportive and offered professional advice which helped us to resolve the issues quickly. Thank you.”

— Dianne Friday

★★★★★

“Tim was exceptionally helpful in providing prompt and insightful advice on a time-sensitive matter.”

— Paul Arthur

★★★★★

“Excellent work by Tim Haq in preparing and organising party wall notices. Very helpful, prompt and efficient.”

— Richard Parry

★★★★★

“Tim was great; very responsive, reassuring and patient in his guidance. Highly recommended.”

— Simon Wongsuwarn

★★★★★

“An absolute pleasure to work with. 10/10. Cannot recommend enough! Very helpful and informative.”

— Hanifa Islam

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Free Online Tool

Do I Need a Party Wall Notice?

Answer a few quick questions to find out if your building works require a notice under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996.

What type of works are you planning?

Select the option that best describes your project.

Where is the work in relation to your neighbour's property?

Think about the shared wall or boundary between properties.

How deep will the excavation be?

This determines which section of the Act applies.

Is the chimney breast on a shared (party) wall?

Will the new structure be on or near a boundary?

What are you doing to the wall?

🤔

Not Sure? That's OK!

The Party Wall Act can be complicated. Send us your plans or a quick description and we'll tell you exactly what you need — completely free.

Get Free Advice Call Us Now

Need Expert Advice?

Free, no-obligation project review from qualified party wall surveyors.

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Free Online Tool

Party Wall Cost Estimator

Get an instant indicative quote for your party wall surveyor fees. Fixed fees, no hidden costs.

Estimate Your Costs

Answer 4 quick questions for an indicative fee range.

Step 1: Your Role

Step 2: Type of Works

Step 3: Number of Adjoining Owners

How many neighbours are affected by the works?

Step 4: Surveyor Arrangement

If the adjoining owner agrees, one surveyor can act for both parties (saving costs).

Why Our Fees Are Different

💰

Fixed Fees

No hourly rates, no surprises. You know exactly what you'll pay from day one.

📋

All-Inclusive

Notices, awards, schedules of condition, site visits — everything included in one fee.

🤝

AO Fees Covered

Building owners: we can act as agreed surveyor, meaning you only pay one fee instead of two.

Want an Exact Quote?

Send us your project details for a firm, fixed-fee quote — free and no obligation.

Get Your Quote

Interactive Guide

Party Wall Process Flowchart

Follow the steps to understand exactly where you are in the process and what happens next.

Which side of the wall are you on?

Select your role to see the process that applies to you.

Step 1: Serve the Notice(s)

Before any notifiable work can start, you must serve the correct Party Wall Notice on every affected adjoining owner.

Which notice applies?

Section 1 — building a new wall on or at the boundary  · 1 month

Section 3 — works to an existing party wall (cutting in, raising, underpinning, chimney removal)  · 2 months

Section 6 — excavation within 3m or 6m of an adjoining structure  · 1 month

What the notice must contain

  • The building owner's name and address (or service address)
  • A description of the proposed works
  • Plans, sections and details of the works (where applicable)
  • The proposed start date — after the notice period
  • A request that the adjoining owner respond within 14 days

How to serve

  • By hand to the adjoining owner (in person)
  • By post to the adjoining property (and any separate service address)
  • By email — only if the adjoining owner has agreed to electronic service (Electronic Communications Order 2016)
  • On every owner — freeholder, leaseholder, and, where applicable, tenant

Once served, your neighbour has 14 days to respond. Continue when they do.

Step 2: The Adjoining Owner’s Response

Within 14 days of receiving your notice, your neighbour must consent, dissent, or stay silent (which counts as a deemed dispute).

14 days from service — no response means a dispute has arisen.

How did your neighbour respond?

Option 1(a) — Consent, No Surveyor

Your neighbour has agreed in writing. No surveyor is needed. You can start works immediately, keeping the agreed start date and complying with the notified works.

📷

Option 1(b) — Consent + Schedule of Condition

Your neighbour consents but wants their property recorded before works start. A surveyor carries out the Schedule of Condition. Once complete, works can begin.

Step 3: Appointing Surveyors

A dispute has arisen. Surveyors must now be appointed under Section 10 of the Act.

How will surveyors be appointed?

Step 3: No Response — The 10-Day Letter

Silence past the 14-day response period is a deemed dispute under Section 10(1)(b) of the Act. The next step is the formal 10-day letter.

What is the 10-day letter?

Under Section 10(4)(a) of the Act, if the adjoining owner has not appointed a surveyor within 14 days of your notice, you may serve a request giving them a further 10 days to appoint one.

The letter must be served in writing, identify the notice served, and state that failure to appoint within 10 days will lead you to appoint a surveyor on their behalf.

Still no response after 10 days

Under Section 10(4)(b), you may then appoint a surveyor on your neighbour’s behalf. The dispute is resolved between the two surveyors, just like Option 3.

What happens next depends on the outcome of the 10-day letter:

Section 10(4)(b) — Surveyor Appointed on Their Behalf

1

You appoint a surveyor on the adjoining owner’s behalf (not your own surveyor — must be independent)

2

You also appoint your own surveyor

3

The two surveyors agree a Schedule of Condition and prepare the Award

Works can begin once the Award is served

Typical timescale: 4–6 weeks after the 10-day letter expires
🤝

Option 2 — Agreed Surveyor

1

Both parties appoint one Agreed Surveyor

2

Schedule of Condition carried out

3

Party Wall Award prepared and served

Works can begin

Typical timescale: 2–3 weeks from appointment

Option 3 — Separate Surveyors

1

Each party appoints their own surveyor

2

Schedule of Condition carried out

3

Two surveyors agree the Award together

Works can begin

Typical timescale: 3–5 weeks from appointment

You’ve Received a Notice

Your neighbour is planning works. You have 14 days to respond. Here are your options:

Option 1(a) — Consent

You agree to the works. No surveyor is involved. The building owner can proceed after the notice period. This costs you nothing.

Important: Without a Schedule of Condition, it may be harder to prove damage was caused by the works.
Full Guide for Adjoining Owners
📷

Option 1(b) — Consent + SoC

You consent but request a Schedule of Condition. A surveyor records your property’s condition before works start. The building owner pays for this. This protects you if damage occurs.

Full Guide for Adjoining Owners
🤝

Option 2 — Agreed Surveyor

You and your neighbour appoint one surveyor to act impartially for both sides. The surveyor carries out a Schedule of Condition, then prepares and serves the Award. Works can begin once the Award is served.

Typical timescale: 2–3 weeks. Fastest and most cost-effective option.

Option 3 — Own Surveyor

You appoint your own surveyor. The two surveyors work together to agree the Schedule of Condition and Award before works can begin.

Typical timescale: 3–5 weeks.
💬

Not Sure? We’ll Help — Free

Call us or send a message. We’ll explain your options clearly and walk you through the next steps.

Need Help With the Process?

Free, no-obligation advice from qualified party wall surveyors.

Get Free Advice

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What Our Clients Say

Every Review, In Their Own Words

150+ five-star Google reviews from Building Owners, Adjoining Owners, architects, and developers across London.

5.0 / 5.0

★★★★★ 150+ Google Reviews

★★★★★

“Very good quality of service and helped through beyond party wall needs. Knowledgable and highly recommended.”

— Rajasankar Rajagopal

★★★★★

“Tim is a very experienced and thoughtful partywall surveyor. would definitely use/recommend his services.”

— Rahul Rattan

★★★★★

“Tim was very supportive and offered professional advice which helped us to resolve the issues quickly. Thank you”

— Dianne Friday

★★★★★

“I would highly recommend Tim. He was a fantastic help to ensure that I got the outcome i was after. 10/10”

— Dan Gray

★★★★★

“Tim was quick to respond to a query I had and was very helpful resolving some issues. Highly recommended.”

— Suku

★★★★★

“Thank you very much Sir.\nYou were my lowest quote.\nProfessional service.\nHighly recommended.\n5 Stars 🌟”

— SD J

★★★★★

“Excellent service from Tim — very accommodating and supportive throughout. I would highly recommend.”

— Karen Hayles

★★★★★

“Tim was exceptionally helpful in providing prompt and insightful advice on a time-sensitive matter.”

— Paul Arthur

★★★★★

“Tim was just what we needed. Efficient, helpful and knowledgable. He made it a very smooth process. Would highly recommend.”

— Isabelle Le Riche

★★★★★

“An absolute pleasure to work with. 10/10. Cannot recommend enough!! Very helpful and informative”

— Hanifa Islam

★★★★★

“Brilliant job by Tim, took time out to explain all the rules and regs and was very thorough.”

— M Nasir

★★★★★

“Excelllent work by Tim Haq in preparing and organising party wall notices. Tim was very helpful as well as prompt and efficient.”

— Richard Parry

★★★★★

“Tim has been great from start to finish, with excellent communication throughout the process. I couldn’t recommend highly enough!”

— Peter Moorhead

★★★★★

“Excellent service, always kept me in the loop and really professional. Happy with service.”

— Saff

★★★★★

“Tim was great; very responsive, reassuring and patient in his guidance. Highly recommended”

— Simon Wongsuwarn

★★★★★

“Tim is extremely professional. Throughout the process, he is always there to help and offer his professional opinion. Thank you Tim.”

— Positive Progression

★★★★★

“Tim was extremely prompt and helpful regarding all aspects. He made the process seemless and stress free. I highly recommend using him.”

— Kishen Patel

★★★★★

“Very understanding, efficient and they know what they are doing. Also want to help”

— Elizabeth Anderson

★★★★★

“Provide a very professional service at a fair fixed price even if interaction with the adjoining property surveyor requires a lot of work.”

— Jason Bowsher

★★★★★

“Dealt with Tim. Competitive price and excellent service. I would have no trouble in recommending to friends/family based on my experience.”

— Will Cassar

★★★★★

“Neighbours were doing work and Tim was great in providing unbiased info to me and eventually reviewing the property for the final agreement.”

— Steve Darnell

★★★★★

“Tim and his team did an amazing work.\nVery professional company.\nSupper happy with everything.\nI would definitely use them again if I need to”

— Slavi Todorov

★★★★★

“Would highly recommend Tim for any party wall matters, great communication and helped take the stress out of a particularly awkward situation!”

— Jac Trickett

★★★★★

“Great service. Quick to reply. Very professional. Would definitely recommend.”

— Beatriz Mariño

★★★★★

“Very good service from Tim. Communication and standard of work excellent”

— Nick Hoareau

★★★★★

“Very attentive to detail, well spoken, polite, patient and supportive.”

— Tandiwe Sithole

★★★★★

“Tim is very professional and is very prompt with his communication. Would strongly recommend to anyone who is in need of any party wall consultation.”

— Murali Sivanandan

★★★★★

“Tim conducted himself professionally and I’d definitely use him again.”

— Brent Petersen

★★★★★

“Tim was fab, replied with lightning quick speed, was super polite with neighbours and whole process went very smoothly. Would use again and recommend.”

— Adam Shonfeld

★★★★★

“Tim, was very helpful and understood my\nconcerns. He explained everything to me about the party wall process and any questions I had he could answer.”

— Lorraine Legister

★★★★★

“Tim was extremely pleasant and easy to deal with. He was responsive, prompt and very professional in all aspects of arranging the party wall agreements.”

— Jake Powrie

★★★★★

“Excellent service!!! Very professional!!! Keep up the good work ..”

— Zaheer Ibrahim

★★★★★

“Excellent service by telephone did not want any money but very concerned about me and the work I was thinking of getting done good advice thank you so much”

— selvi daniel

★★★★★

“Very helpful, and offers both paid services as well as general advice. Looks to solve your issues proactively rather than just charge you an arm and a leg.”

— Edward Bennett

★★★★★

“Tim helped me with my party wall agreements, he took time to explain everything to me thoroughly on the phone and throughout the process. Thanks so much Tim!”

— Siobhan Quinn

★★★★★

“Clear advice, speedy service, no complaints. Thank you Tim!”

— Jason Rajamogan

★★★★★

“Outstanding service. Tim is highly professional, responsive, and exceptionally efficient. We would gladly use his services again in the future without hesitation.”

— Olivia Oragui

★★★★★

“Great company I would definitely recommend in the future”

— Josh Healey

★★★★★

“Amazing service from this company from start to finish. Very personal service, extremely efficient and always explained the process along the way. Highly recommended.”

— Juliet Ramsey

★★★★★

“Tim was very helpful and provide lots of advice over the phone (for free) which I was very grateful for. He was prompt in responding to emails and met my expectations.”

— a lyt

★★★★★

“Reliable informative and prompt service provided”

— hemant patel

★★★★★

“Wonderful quality of service. Tim was very helpful and provided good advice. Resolved the matter quickly. I would recommend Party Wall Specialists. You will not regret it.”

— Patricia Haywood

★★★★★

“Tim is so helpful and happy to go above and beyond. We secured a party wall agreement with both neighbours in a timely and more than satisfactory way. I would highly recommend.”

— Lisa Kunwar

★★★★★

“Great service from Tim - highly recommend!!”

— Luke Kievenaar

★★★★★

“Great service! Very thorough and nice guy!”

— Q

★★★★★

“Polite, good communication and efficient”

— nicholas Tiffin

★★★★★

“I used Tim from the Party Wall Specialists to get my Party Wall Agreements in place with my neighbours. Tim was extremely helpful throughout the process and I would highly recommend.”

— Andrew Carasco

★★★★★

“Instructed Tim to carry out a survey and make Party Wall agreement on short notice and I wasn't disappointed. He was higly professional and good value for money.\n\nHighly Recommended.”

— Fahad Mahmood

★★★★★

“We have been very impressed and would highly recommend using this company. Tim was very quick, efficient and helpful through the process keeping us updated on the progress throughout.”

— Beth Tyler

★★★★★

“Tim from Party Wall Specialists was extremely helpful, answering questions and explaining things very clearly. He is a great communicator and acted quickly in the time frames we required.”

— Fiona Gatto

★★★★★

“Working with Tim at Party Wall Specialists was great - he was clear, efficient and professional and made the whole process super easy. Definitely took the stress out of this part of the process!”

— Becky L

★★★★★

“Experience & Professional”

— Imran Khan

★★★★★

“Tim Haq is very competent and professional in handling our party wall award (Agreed Surveyor). He was able to clearly explain any issues and suggested possible resolutions. Recommended. Thanks once again!”

— Tiancong Liang

★★★★★

“I was recommended these surveyors by my builder. Very professional, attentive and very reasonable on fees. I dealt with Tim who was available to speak with me even outside of office hours! High recommended!”

— Ben Perl

★★★★★

“I would highly recommend Tim. The process would not be as smooth without his help. He always responds quickly and is patient in explaining all the details. This truly helps us to be on time to start the work.”

— Zeting Li

★★★★★

“Tim was recommended by our structural engineer. From start to finish he was professional, prompt and attended to the matter efficiently and effectively. Reasonably priced and I would not hesitate to use again.”

— Mana Mahil

★★★★★

“Our experience with Party Wall Specialist is excellent. Tim is our go to contact point. Not only that he is so professional, but also that he is very experienced and performed his great people skill to resolve a few party wall related issues for us. Tim is also one of the most responsive person we met. We cannot recommend him enough.”

— Tony Shek

★★★★★

“We had instructed Tim.Haq for our party wall works back in June 2019\nIt has been some what of a great experience for us as a family to find a company that cares and put there clients Interest first.\nTim’s commitment has been 100% to today’s date (19th March 2020.)\nWe had very difficult neighbour and once again Tim had handle our neighbour like a baby which wasn’t his job and saved us lots of costs and time with neighbours surveyors.\nA BIG THANK YOU\nJay. Croydon”

— diya patel

★★★★★

“Tim was extremely helpful at guiding me through the process of party wall agreements. He quoted me an excellent price and went over and above to provide additional information and paperwork. He was able to meet our very short deadline. An excellent service and highly recommended.”

— Lynsey Luff

★★★★★

“Brilliant and efficient service from start to finish. One stop shop !!. Very polite service, prompt in answering calls, fast turn around, spends lots of time with client and good industry knowledge. I will be more than happy to recommend Party Wall Specialists LTD to anyone. Professional charges are very reasonable as well.”

— Ariaratnam Sakthitharan

Showing 60 of 150+ reviews. Read all on Google, or leave your own if we have worked together.

Read all on Google → Leave us a review →

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Planning Works That Affect A Neighbour

Your Overview — Party Wall Matters Made Simple

A plain-English summary of the process, our fees, and how we help. Written for building owners.

First — The Basics

When you carry out works that affect a shared wall, structure, or boundary, you are legally required to serve Party Wall Notices on your neighbour(s) before works begin. The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 exists to protect everyone involved and to make sure works happen fairly.

Key Term

Building Owner

The owner(s) proposing to carry out the building works. That's you.

Key Term

Adjoining Owner

The neighbouring owner(s) whose property may be affected. Each property may have more than one Owner (leaseholder, freeholder, management company).

The Three Key Stages

This is how the process unfolds in practice.

01

Serving Notices

You are legally responsible for preparing and serving Notices on all affected neighbours. You can serve them yourself, or appoint us to do it for you. Notices must be valid and properly served — an invalid Notice restarts the clock.

02

Schedule of Condition

A surveyor records the neighbour's property condition before works begin. If damage is later claimed, the SoC is the reference point for what was there beforehand — protecting both parties.

03

Party Wall Award

A legal document served on all parties, setting out how and when works will be carried out. Protects both sides and ensures works proceed within the Act.

Your Neighbour's Response — and the Fees

Your neighbour has 14 days to respond. Your total cost depends on their choice.

Option 1(a)

Consent — no surveyor needed

£100

per Notice, per Owner

Your neighbour consents. No surveyor is appointed. No survey is carried out. Works can start the next day.

2 owners £200 · 3 owners £300 · 4 owners £400 · amendments / additional Notices £60

Option 1(b)

Consent + Schedule of Condition

£500

per Owner (SoC £400 + Notice £100)

Your neighbour consents but requests a Schedule of Condition as a reference point. A surveyor (not a Party Wall Surveyor) carries out the survey; the report goes to both sides. Works can start 2–3 days after the survey.

2 owners £1,000 · 3 owners £1,500 · 4 owners £2,000

Most Recommended
Option 2

Dissent — Agreed Surveyor

£1,200

per Owner — reduced rate

Both sides use the same surveyor. The surveyor prepares the Schedule of Condition and Party Wall Award and mediates throughout. Fastest and most cost-effective dissent route — typically 2–3 weeks.

2 owners £1,700 · 3 owners £2,200 · 4 owners £2,700

Discounted rate T&Cs apply: max 5 hours, invoice settled within 7 days, Google review posted within 14 days of Award.

Option 3

Dissent — Separate Surveyors

£800

BO Surveyor fee only

Each side appoints its own surveyor. The two surveyors work together to prepare the Schedule of Condition and Award. Typically 3–5 weeks. As the Building Owner, you are also responsible for the Adjoining Owner's reasonable surveyor fees (similar amount).

2 owners £1,350 · 3 owners £1,900 · 4 owners £2,450

If your neighbour doesn't respond within 14 days, a 10-day reminder letter is served. If that expires, a dispute is automatically deemed — and only Option 3 becomes available.

What's Included When We Act for You

When we're appointed as the Building Owner's (or Agreed) Surveyor, you get:

  • Reviewing designs and discussing implications
  • Preparing and serving Notices in line with Land Registry details
  • Liaising with Adjoining Owners or their surveyors
  • Conducting the Schedule of Condition survey
  • Preparing and sharing the Schedule of Condition report
  • Preparing the Party Wall Award

Extras & Notes

  • Typical project time: 5–7 hours.
  • Further time: £195 per hour if a project requires significantly more time than usual.
  • Post-work visit: £200 each (rarely requested; not included in the standard fee).
  • Excluded: boundary disputes and extra-time projects are not covered by the standard fee.
  • Terms: our General Terms and Conditions apply — view here.

Our Recommendation

Talk to your neighbour before Notices are served. Most party wall problems dissolve over a cup of tea. Neighbours are often happy to accept your chosen surveyor as the Agreed Surveyor (Option 2) — or to propose one of their own for mutual agreement. Either way, it's faster and cheaper than separate surveyors under Option 3.

Ready to appoint us?

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Received a Notice, Or Worried About Works Next Door

Your Overview — What It Means For You

A plain-English summary of your rights, your options, and what's included — at no cost to you.

First — The Basics

If you've received a Party Wall Notice, your neighbour (the Building Owner) is proposing works that fall within the Party Wall etc. Act 1996. The Act exists to protect you — and to ensure the works next door happen fairly and without damage to your property.

Key Term

Building Owner

The owner(s) proposing to carry out the building works — your neighbour.

Key Term

Adjoining Owner

The neighbouring owner(s) whose property may be affected by those works. That's you.

The Good News

You don't pay us.

Your Building Owner neighbour is responsible for your reasonable surveyor fees. Our appointment, Schedule of Condition, and the Party Wall Award are all at no cost to you.

Fixed Fee

£995

fixed fee

For acting as your Adjoining Owner’s Surveyor. A flat £995 covers our full appointment — reviewing drawings, Schedule of Condition, negotiating, and serving the Party Wall Award.

Paid by the Building Owner under Section 11 of the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 — not by you.

Your 14-Day Response Window

You have 14 days from when Notices are served to respond. You can either consent or dissent.

Option 1

Consent To The Notices

No Party Wall Surveyor is involved. Within this route you have two sub-options:

1 (a)

Simple Consent

You consent. No surveyor is involved. No survey of your property is carried out.

1 (b)

Consent + Schedule of Condition

You consent but request a Schedule of Condition — a pre-works record of your property. Any issues are handled directly between you and your neighbour.

Important: both consent options can only be chosen within the first 14 days.

Option 2 or 3

Dissent To The Notices

A surveyor is involved. A Schedule of Condition and a formal Party Wall Award are prepared.

Option 2

Agreed Surveyor

One surveyor represents both sides. Fastest & most cost-effective for your neighbour — and still impartial to you.

Option 3

Separate Surveyors

You appoint your own surveyor. The two surveyors work together throughout the process.

What's the difference between Option 1(b) and Option 2?

Option 1(b): A Schedule of Condition is prepared and given to both sides. No Party Wall Surveyor is involved — any issues are handled directly between the owners.

Option 2: A Party Wall Surveyor is involved to guide, mediate and issue a formal Award throughout the process.

If you don't respond within 14 days, a 10-day reminder letter is served. If that expires, a dispute is automatically deemed — and your Building Owner's surveyor can appoint a surveyor on your behalf. Best to respond early and choose your own.

The Three Key Stages

However the process unfolds, these are the stages you'll hear about.

01

Serving Notices

This step triggers the whole process. Building Owners are legally responsible for serving valid Notices on you. Check the Notice carefully — the clock only starts from a validly-served Notice.

02

Schedule of Condition

A pre-works survey of the parts of your property that may be affected. Documents the current condition as the reference point — if anything goes wrong later, it's the record of what was there before.

03

Party Wall Award

A legal document served on all parties. It sets out the scope, rights, and timings of the works, and each party's responsibilities. Typically includes plans, schedules, and the Schedule of Condition.

What's Included When We Act As Your Surveyor

When we're appointed as the Adjoining Owner's (or Agreed) Surveyor, you get:

  • Reviewing the served Notices for validity
  • Reviewing the Building Owner's designs and drawings
  • Liaising with the Building Owner or their surveyor
  • Conducting a Schedule of Condition of your property
  • Reviewing and sharing the Schedule of Condition report
  • Preparing the Party Wall Award

Ready to appoint us?

Let’s take it forward.

Appoint us as your Adjoining Owner’s Surveyor in 2 minutes — the Building Owner pays our fees, not you. Or download a blank template to fill manually.

Appoint Us Online → Download Blank LoA

Got A Notice? Let's Sort It Out Together.

Free, friendly advice. Surveyor's fee paid by the Building Owner — not you.

020 8545 2680 · 077 2828 2727 · hello@partywallspecialists.com
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Introduced by a trusted partner

Party Wall Matters — Your Overview

A plain-English summary of the process, our fees, and how we help.

First — How Our Fees Work

Our fee structure ensures that the owners proposing the works only pay for services actually carried out by a Party Wall Surveyor. The final fee depends on how your neighbours (Adjoining Owners) respond.

When you carry out works under the Party Wall etc. Act 1996, your neighbours must be formally notified. Each property may have more than one Owner (e.g. leaseholder + freeholder, sometimes including a management company) — which affects the number of Notices and the fee.

The process is really about your neighbour's choices and which option they take.

The Party Wall Process — Step by Step

Every Party Wall job follows the same three stages.

01

Preparing & Serving Notices

This starts the whole process. Notices must be served on every affected neighbour — that includes leaseholders, freeholders, and management companies. You can serve Notices yourself, or appoint us to prepare and serve them for you. Getting this right is critical: invalid Notices waste time and restart the clock.

02

Schedule of Condition

A surveyor records your neighbour's property condition before works start. This acts as a reference point — so if anyone later claims damage, it's easy to see exactly what was there before. Protects both sides.

03

The Party Wall Award

A legal document confirming how and when the works will be carried out. Required whenever a surveyor is appointed. It protects both sides and ensures the works are regulated under the Act. Plans and the Schedule of Condition are typically attached.

Neighbour Response — Options & Fees

Your final fee depends on which route your neighbours choose. All fees shown are fixed — no hidden extras.

Option 1(a) · Consent

Neighbour agrees — no surveyor needed

The cleanest outcome. Your neighbour consents to the works and no survey is required. Works can start the very next day.

1 Owner

£100

2 Owners

£200

3 Owners

£300

4 Owners

£400

Per Notice, per Owner. Amendments or additional Notices: £60 each.

Option 1(b) · Consent + Survey

Neighbour agrees but requests a Schedule of Condition

Your neighbour consents but wants a survey of their property before works start — as a reference point in case damage is later claimed. No Party Wall Surveyor is involved; issues are handled directly between owners.

1 Owner

£500

2 Owners

£1,000

3 Owners

£1,500

4 Owners

£2,000

Schedule of Condition £400 + Notice £100 per owner.

Most Recommended
Option 2 · Dissent (Agreed Surveyor)

One surveyor represents both sides

Both parties use the same surveyor — fastest and most cost-effective route when a surveyor is required. We prepare the Schedule of Condition and the Party Wall Award and guide everyone through.

1 Owner

£—

2 Owners

£—

3 Owners

£—

4 Owners

£—

Discounted rates: We offer reduced fees on Agreed Surveyor appointments subject to T&Cs — no more than 5 hours spent; invoice settled within 7 days of presentation; a Google review posted within 14 days of Award service.

Option 3 · Dissent (Separate Surveyors)

Each side appoints its own surveyor

Two surveyors work together to agree the Schedule of Condition and Award. As the Building Owner you pay both surveyors' fees — yours and your neighbour's.

1 Owner

£—

2 Owners

£—

3 Owners

£—

4 Owners

£—

Building Owner Surveyor fee shown. The adjoining owner's surveyor fee is separate and also paid by the Building Owner.

The 14-Day Rule

Option 1 must be chosen by the neighbour within 14 days of the Notice being served. If no response is received, a dispute is automatically deemed to exist — then only Options 2 or 3 are available. A reminder letter can be sent giving 10 additional days; if there's still no response, only Option 3 remains.

Option 1(b) vs Option 2 — what's the difference?

1(b): Schedule of Condition is prepared — no Party Wall Surveyor involved. Issues handled directly between the owners.

Option 2: A Party Wall Surveyor is involved to guide and mediate throughout the process.

Timescales

How quickly works can start depends on which option your neighbour takes.

Option 1(a)

Works can start the next day. The process finishes when the neighbour provides consent.

Option 1(b)

Works can start once the Schedule of Condition report has been shared with both parties (2–3 days after the visit).

Option 2

Typically 2–3 weeks to complete the full process.

Option 3

Typically 3–5 weeks. Can take longer if the other side's owner or surveyor doesn't engage promptly.

Extras & Additional Charges

  • ·Post-work visits: £200 each (if requested — typically not undertaken).
  • ·Boundary disputes and extra-time projects are not included in the fees above.
  • ·Additional time: projects requiring significantly more time than usual (5–7 hours is typical) may incur additional charges.
  • ·Hourly rate: £195 per hour beyond what's included.

What's Included When We Act as The Surveyors

When we're appointed as your (Building Owner) or Agreed Surveyor, here's what you get:

  • Reviewing designs and discussing implications
  • Preparing and serving Notices (from Land Registry details)
  • Liaising with Adjoining Owners or their surveyors
  • Conducting the Schedule of Condition survey
  • Preparing and sharing the Schedule of Condition report
  • Preparing and serving the Party Wall Award

Once You Confirm the Fee

It's our firm's policy to make sure you're comfortable with the fee before we go any further. Once confirmed, these are the main stages:

  1. 1Appointment of the Surveyor — in writing. We'll send you instructions on exactly how to do this.
  2. 2Prepare and Serve Notices on the Adjoining Owners, if not already served.
  3. 3Arrange and carry out the Schedule of Condition. A report is prepared where required.
  4. 4Party Wall Award served on all owners, with plans and the Schedule of Condition attached.

A friendly tip

Talking to your neighbours directly about party wall matters — before Notices land on the doormat — can reduce costs and speed up the whole process. Neighbours are often happy to agree to your chosen surveyor as the Agreed Surveyor, or to propose their own preferred surveyor for mutual agreement.

Ready To Start?

Free initial call. Tell us about your project and we'll confirm your fees and timeline.

020 8545 2680 · 077 2828 2727 · hello@partywallspecialists.com
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Local Party Wall Surveyors

Party Wall Surveyors in Borough

Free, friendly advice for building owners and adjoining owners.

Working in Borough

We are based in Wimbledon and work across every London borough. Whether you are a building owner planning an extension, loft conversion or basement — or an adjoining owner protecting your property — we provide clear, practical advice at fixed, competitive fees.

Serving notices, drafting schedules of condition, and preparing party wall awards is what we do every day. Our local knowledge helps us move quickly so your project stays on track.

"Need answers? Chat with us — our advice is free and friendly."

1. Project Review

Identify your obligations.

2. Appoint Surveyor

BO, AO, or Agreed.

3. Notices Served

Prepared and served.

4. Schedule of Condition

Where requested or appointed.

5. Award Served

Where dispute has arisen.

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