Property Ownership UK 2026 — Leasehold, Freehold, Ground Rent and Service Charges

Subsidence 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.

Mortgage information is general guidance only. Mortgages are regulated by the FCA. YOUR HOME MAY BE REPOSSESSED IF YOU DO NOT KEEP UP REPAYMENTS ON YOUR MORTGAGE. Consult an FCA-regulated mortgage adviser before making decisions.

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?

CauseHow it happensPrevalence
Clay soil shrinkageClay shrinks in dry weather, causing ground to dropMost common — especially South East England
Tree rootsRoots absorb moisture, drying the soil and causing shrinkageVery common near mature trees on clay
Leaking drainsWater washes away or softens soil beneath foundationsCommon
MiningHistorical mining activity creates voids undergroundSpecific areas (Midlands, North, Wales)
Poor original foundationsOlder properties may have shallow foundationsPre-1950s properties
Prolonged dry weatherDry summers cause clay to shrinkIncreasing with climate change

Signs of Subsidence

SignWhat to look for
Diagonal cracksWider at the top than the bottom, often near windows/doors
Crack widthCracks wider than 3mm (thickness of a 10p coin edge)
New cracks appearingEspecially after dry weather
Doors and windows stickingFrames distorting as walls move
Wallpaper crinklingAt wall-ceiling joints
Cracks that worsen over timeOld cracks reopening or widening

Not All Cracks Are Subsidence

Crack typeLikely causeSubsidence?
Hairline cracks (under 1mm)Normal settlement, temperature changesUnlikely
Cracks around recent workPlaster shrinkage, building workNo
Horizontal cracksLateral movement, wall tie failureDifferent issue
Cracks above windows/doors, wider at topSubsidence patternPossibly
Cracks with ongoing widening (monitor with tell-tales)SubsidencePossibly

What to Do if You Suspect Subsidence

StepAction
1Don’t panic — most cases don’t need underpinning
2Monitor the cracks — photograph them, measure with a ruler, mark with pencil and date
3Contact your buildings insurer — report the suspected subsidence
4Insurer sends a surveyor — they’ll assess the cause and severity
5Investigation — drain surveys, soil analysis, tree surveys, monitoring
6Treatment — based on the cause (see below)

Investigation

AssessmentWhat it involvesCost (if paying privately)
Structural surveySurveyor 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 investigationTrial pits or boreholes to analyse soil conditions£500 – £2,000
Level surveyPrecise measurement of floor/wall levels£300 – £800
Tree surveyArborist assessment of nearby trees£200 – £500

Note: If you claim on insurance, the insurer arranges and pays for investigations.

Treatment Options

TreatmentWhen usedCostSuccess rate
Tree management/removalTree roots causing soil shrinkage£500 – £5,000High
Drain repairLeaking drains washing away soil£1,000 – £5,000High
Root barriersPreventing root growth under foundations£2,000 – £5,000Good
Monitoring onlyMinor movement that stabilisesMinimalMany cases resolve
UnderpinningSevere cases where foundation must be strengthened£10,000 – £50,000+Very high

Underpinning Methods

MethodHow it worksCost
Traditional mass concreteExcavate beneath foundations, fill with concrete in stages£10,000 – £30,000
Mini-piledDrive piles deep into stable ground£20,000 – £50,000
Resin injectionInject 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

FeatureDetail
Buildings insuranceMost policies include subsidence cover
Standard excess£1,000 (industry standard for subsidence claims)
What’s coveredInvestigation, monitoring, repairs, redecoration
What’s not coveredPre-existing subsidence known at purchase
Claim timelineCan take 12–24 months to fully resolve

Previous Subsidence Claims

ImpactDetail
Higher premiumsSignificantly more expensive
Higher excessSome policies set £2,500 – £5,000 excess
Limited choiceFewer insurers will cover the property
Specialist insurersMay need to use specialist property insurance
Must declareAlways declare previous subsidence when applying

Getting Insurance with Subsidence History

StrategyDetail
Use a specialist brokerThey know the market
Provide completion documentationCertificate of structural adequacy, monitoring reports
Show the problem is resolvedLong-term monitoring proving stability
Compare specialist insurersSome specialise in non-standard properties

Buying a Property with Subsidence History

CheckWhat to look for
Certificate of Structural AdequacyConfirms repairs were done properly
Insurance historyWhat was claimed, how it was resolved
Monitoring recordsShow stability over time
Surveyor’s reportGet a full structural survey (not just a homebuyer’s report)
Insurance availabilityCheck you can get affordable insurance before buying
Price discountExpect 10%–20% below comparable properties (resolved subsidence)

Selling with Subsidence History

FactorImpact
Must declare on the TA6 formProperty Information Form asks directly
Price impact (resolved)10%–20% reduction
Price impact (unresolved)20%–50% reduction
Buyer’s mortgageLender will require a structural survey
Supporting documentsCertificate, monitoring data, insurance claim records

Subsidence Risk Areas

RegionRisk levelReason
South East EnglandHighClay soil
LondonHighLondon Clay formation
East AngliaModerate to HighClay and peat soils
MidlandsModerateSome clay, historic mining
South WestLow to ModerateMixed geology
North WestModerateMining legacy
WalesModerateMining areas
ScotlandLowGenerally stable geology

Prevention

MeasureDetail
Tree managementKeep trees at least their mature height distance from the property
Drain maintenanceRegular inspection and repair of drains
Gutters and downpipesKeep clear to prevent water pooling near foundations
Don’t pave right up to wallsAllow some permeable ground for drainage
Monitor cracksEarly detection saves money
New treesPlant at safe distance from buildings (species-dependent)

Summary

Key pointDetail
Most common causeClay soil shrinkage + tree roots
Warning signsDiagonal cracks wider than 3mm, doors/windows sticking
First stepContact your buildings insurer
Most casesResolved WITHOUT underpinning (70%+)
Underpinning cost£10,000 – £50,000+
Insurance excess£1,000 standard for subsidence
Impact on value10%–20% (resolved), 20%–50% (unresolved)
Best preventionTree 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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Sources

  1. FCA — Mortgages
  2. MoneyHelper — Buying a home