Property

Conveyancing Guide UK — The Legal Process of Buying & Selling Property

Understand the conveyancing process when buying or selling a property in the UK. Timelines, costs, what your solicitor does, and how to avoid delays.

Conveyancing is one of the most important — and often most frustrating — parts of buying or selling a property. Understanding the process, typical timelines, and potential pitfalls helps you stay informed and push things along when needed.

The Conveyancing Process: Buying

Step-by-Step Timeline

Stage What Happens Typical Duration
1. Instruct a solicitor Choose and engage your conveyancer Day 1
2. Property searches Local authority, environmental, water, drainage 2–4 weeks
3. Review title deeds Solicitor checks ownership and any issues 1–2 weeks
4. Raise enquiries Solicitor asks seller’s solicitor questions 2–4 weeks
5. Mortgage offer Lender issues formal mortgage offer 2–4 weeks (parallel)
6. Review contract pack You review and approve all documents 1 week
7. Exchange contracts Legally binding commitment; pay deposit 1 day
8. Completion Keys handed over; you become the owner 1–4 weeks after exchange

Total: 8–16 weeks (longer in chains)

Property Searches

Your solicitor commissions several searches to check for issues:

Search What It Checks Cost
Local authority Planning permissions, building regulations, road schemes £100–£200
Environmental Flood risk, contamination, subsidence £30–£50
Water and drainage Public drains, water supply £30–£60
Chancel repair liability Obligation to contribute to church repairs £15–£25
Mining (if applicable) Past mining activity £30–£50

Exchange vs Completion

Exchange: The point at which you become legally committed. You pay a deposit (usually 10% of the purchase price) and set a completion date. After exchange, pulling out means losing your deposit.

Completion: The day you get the keys. The remaining purchase money is transferred, and ownership legally passes to you.

Conveyancing Costs

Cost Typical Amount
Solicitor/conveyancer fee £800–£1,500 + VAT
Property searches £250–£400
Land Registry fee £100–£300
Bank transfer fee £30–£50
Stamp duty Varies by property price
Leasehold extras (if applicable) £200–£500
Total legal costs £1,200–£2,500

Choosing a Conveyancer

Factor What to Check
Accreditation CQS (Conveyancing Quality Scheme) accredited
Fee structure Fixed fee preferred over hourly (avoids surprises)
Reviews Check Trustpilot, Google, and personal recommendations
Communication Will they update you regularly?
Location Local knowledge is useful but not essential (online conveyancers work well)
No completion, no fee Some firms offer this — you don’t pay if the sale falls through

Common Delays and How to Avoid Them

Delay Cause Prevention
Slow searches Overloaded local authority Instruct solicitor immediately after offer accepted
Outstanding enquiries Seller slow to respond Chase regularly via your solicitor
Mortgage offer delays Lender processing times Apply early; provide all documents promptly
Chain issues Another party in the chain stalls Stay in close contact; be flexible on dates
Leasehold complications Management company slow; lease issues Instruct searches early; flag leasehold issues immediately
Title issues Boundary disputes, missing documents Solicitor should flag early; may need indemnity insurance

Tips to Speed Things Up

  1. Instruct a solicitor before your offer is accepted — hit the ground running
  2. Get your mortgage agreement in principle before making an offer
  3. Respond to your solicitor’s requests immediately — delays are often at the buyer’s end
  4. Provide ID and proof of funds early — anti-money laundering checks take time
  5. Be flexible on completion dates — rigid dates can stall chains
  6. Maintain regular contact — a weekly check-in with your solicitor keeps things moving

Selling: The Seller’s Conveyancing Process

Stage Action
1. Instruct solicitor Engage your conveyancer
2. Complete property information forms TA6 (property information), TA10 (fittings and contents)
3. Provide title deeds Or solicitor obtains from Land Registry
4. Respond to buyer’s enquiries Answer all questions promptly and honestly
5. Agree completion date Coordinate with buyer and any chain
6. Exchange contracts Legally binding
7. Completion Hand over keys, receive sale funds

For a broader view of property buying, see our first-time buyer guide and home survey guide.