Property Ownership UK 2026 — Leasehold, Freehold, Ground Rent and Service ChargesSubsidence UK — Signs, Insurance, Costs, and What to Do
How to identify subsidence in UK properties, what to do, insurance coverage, repair costs, and how it affects buying or selling a home.
Subsidence affects an estimated 1 in 5 UK homes to some degree, particularly in areas with clay soil. It can be frightening — but in most cases, it’s manageable without underpinning, and insurance covers the cost.
What Causes Subsidence?
| Cause | How it happens | Prevalence |
|---|
| Clay soil shrinkage | Clay shrinks in dry weather, causing ground to drop | Most common — especially South East England |
| Tree roots | Roots absorb moisture, drying the soil and causing shrinkage | Very common near mature trees on clay |
| Leaking drains | Water washes away or softens soil beneath foundations | Common |
| Mining | Historical mining activity creates voids underground | Specific areas (Midlands, North, Wales) |
| Poor original foundations | Older properties may have shallow foundations | Pre-1950s properties |
| Prolonged dry weather | Dry summers cause clay to shrink | Increasing with climate change |
Signs of Subsidence
| Sign | What to look for |
|---|
| Diagonal cracks | Wider at the top than the bottom, often near windows/doors |
| Crack width | Cracks wider than 3mm (thickness of a 10p coin edge) |
| New cracks appearing | Especially after dry weather |
| Doors and windows sticking | Frames distorting as walls move |
| Wallpaper crinkling | At wall-ceiling joints |
| Cracks that worsen over time | Old cracks reopening or widening |
Not All Cracks Are Subsidence
| Crack type | Likely cause | Subsidence? |
|---|
| Hairline cracks (under 1mm) | Normal settlement, temperature changes | Unlikely |
| Cracks around recent work | Plaster shrinkage, building work | No |
| Horizontal cracks | Lateral movement, wall tie failure | Different issue |
| Cracks above windows/doors, wider at top | Subsidence pattern | Possibly |
| Cracks with ongoing widening (monitor with tell-tales) | Subsidence | Possibly |
What to Do if You Suspect Subsidence
| Step | Action |
|---|
| 1 | Don’t panic — most cases don’t need underpinning |
| 2 | Monitor the cracks — photograph them, measure with a ruler, mark with pencil and date |
| 3 | Contact your buildings insurer — report the suspected subsidence |
| 4 | Insurer sends a surveyor — they’ll assess the cause and severity |
| 5 | Investigation — drain surveys, soil analysis, tree surveys, monitoring |
| 6 | Treatment — based on the cause (see below) |
Investigation
| Assessment | What it involves | Cost (if paying privately) |
|---|
| Structural survey | Surveyor examines cracks and structure | £400 – £1,000 |
| Crack monitoring (tell-tales) | Gauges fitted across cracks, monitored over 12+ months | £100 – £500 |
| Drain survey (CCTV) | Camera inspection of drains | £200 – £500 |
| Soil investigation | Trial pits or boreholes to analyse soil conditions | £500 – £2,000 |
| Level survey | Precise measurement of floor/wall levels | £300 – £800 |
| Tree survey | Arborist assessment of nearby trees | £200 – £500 |
Note: If you claim on insurance, the insurer arranges and pays for investigations.
Treatment Options
| Treatment | When used | Cost | Success rate |
|---|
| Tree management/removal | Tree roots causing soil shrinkage | £500 – £5,000 | High |
| Drain repair | Leaking drains washing away soil | £1,000 – £5,000 | High |
| Root barriers | Preventing root growth under foundations | £2,000 – £5,000 | Good |
| Monitoring only | Minor movement that stabilises | Minimal | Many cases resolve |
| Underpinning | Severe cases where foundation must be strengthened | £10,000 – £50,000+ | Very high |
Underpinning Methods
| Method | How it works | Cost |
|---|
| Traditional mass concrete | Excavate beneath foundations, fill with concrete in stages | £10,000 – £30,000 |
| Mini-piled | Drive piles deep into stable ground | £20,000 – £50,000 |
| Resin injection | Inject expanding resin to stabilise soil | £5,000 – £15,000 |
Important: Over 70% of subsidence cases do NOT require underpinning. Most are resolved by addressing the cause (tree removal, drain repair) and monitoring.
Insurance and Subsidence
Standard Cover
| Feature | Detail |
|---|
| Buildings insurance | Most policies include subsidence cover |
| Standard excess | £1,000 (industry standard for subsidence claims) |
| What’s covered | Investigation, monitoring, repairs, redecoration |
| What’s not covered | Pre-existing subsidence known at purchase |
| Claim timeline | Can take 12–24 months to fully resolve |
Previous Subsidence Claims
| Impact | Detail |
|---|
| Higher premiums | Significantly more expensive |
| Higher excess | Some policies set £2,500 – £5,000 excess |
| Limited choice | Fewer insurers will cover the property |
| Specialist insurers | May need to use specialist property insurance |
| Must declare | Always declare previous subsidence when applying |
Getting Insurance with Subsidence History
| Strategy | Detail |
|---|
| Use a specialist broker | They know the market |
| Provide completion documentation | Certificate of structural adequacy, monitoring reports |
| Show the problem is resolved | Long-term monitoring proving stability |
| Compare specialist insurers | Some specialise in non-standard properties |
Buying a Property with Subsidence History
| Check | What to look for |
|---|
| Certificate of Structural Adequacy | Confirms repairs were done properly |
| Insurance history | What was claimed, how it was resolved |
| Monitoring records | Show stability over time |
| Surveyor’s report | Get a full structural survey (not just a homebuyer’s report) |
| Insurance availability | Check you can get affordable insurance before buying |
| Price discount | Expect 10%–20% below comparable properties (resolved subsidence) |
Selling with Subsidence History
| Factor | Impact |
|---|
| Must declare on the TA6 form | Property Information Form asks directly |
| Price impact (resolved) | 10%–20% reduction |
| Price impact (unresolved) | 20%–50% reduction |
| Buyer’s mortgage | Lender will require a structural survey |
| Supporting documents | Certificate, monitoring data, insurance claim records |
Subsidence Risk Areas
| Region | Risk level | Reason |
|---|
| South East England | High | Clay soil |
| London | High | London Clay formation |
| East Anglia | Moderate to High | Clay and peat soils |
| Midlands | Moderate | Some clay, historic mining |
| South West | Low to Moderate | Mixed geology |
| North West | Moderate | Mining legacy |
| Wales | Moderate | Mining areas |
| Scotland | Low | Generally stable geology |
Prevention
| Measure | Detail |
|---|
| Tree management | Keep trees at least their mature height distance from the property |
| Drain maintenance | Regular inspection and repair of drains |
| Gutters and downpipes | Keep clear to prevent water pooling near foundations |
| Don’t pave right up to walls | Allow some permeable ground for drainage |
| Monitor cracks | Early detection saves money |
| New trees | Plant at safe distance from buildings (species-dependent) |
Summary
| Key point | Detail |
|---|
| Most common cause | Clay soil shrinkage + tree roots |
| Warning signs | Diagonal cracks wider than 3mm, doors/windows sticking |
| First step | Contact your buildings insurer |
| Most cases | Resolved WITHOUT underpinning (70%+) |
| Underpinning cost | £10,000 – £50,000+ |
| Insurance excess | £1,000 standard for subsidence |
| Impact on value | 10%–20% (resolved), 20%–50% (unresolved) |
| Best prevention | Tree management and drain maintenance |
aliases:
- /mortgages/property-ownership/subsidence-guide-uk/
Your home may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage. PocketWise provides information and guidance — we do not offer financial advice. Seek independent mortgage advice before making decisions about borrowing.
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