Properties

Party Wall Agreement Guide — The Party Wall Act Explained

What the Party Wall Act covers, when you need a party wall agreement, how to serve notice, the surveyor process, and your rights as a building or adjoining owner.

If you’re planning building work near a shared wall or boundary, you may need a party wall agreement. Here’s how the process works.

What Is a Party Wall?

Type Description
Party wall A wall shared between two properties (e.g. the wall between semi-detached or terraced houses)
Party fence wall A wall on a boundary that isn’t part of a building (e.g. a garden wall on the boundary)
Party structure A floor or other structure shared between properties (e.g. a flat floor/ceiling)
Boundary The line separating your property from your neighbour’s

When You Need to Serve Notice

Work planned Notice required?
Building on or along the boundary line Yes — Party Structure Notice
Cutting into a party wall (e.g. inserting a beam) Yes — Party Structure Notice
Making a party wall taller, shorter, or deeper Yes — Party Structure Notice
Removing a chimney breast on a party wall Yes — Party Structure Notice
Loft conversion involving the party wall Yes — Party Structure Notice
Excavation within 3 metres of neighbour’s wall/structure and deeper than their foundations Yes — Notice of Adjacent Excavation
Excavation within 6 metres cutting a 45° line from bottom of neighbour’s foundations Yes — Notice of Adjacent Excavation
Building an extension near the boundary Usually yes (depends on proximity)
Internal work that doesn’t affect party wall No
Work more than 6 metres from any neighbour’s structure No

The Party Wall Process

Step Action Timeframe
1 Decide what work you’re planning Before serving notice
2 Serve a party wall notice on all affected neighbours At least 2 months before work starts (1 month for excavation)
3 Neighbour responds: consent or dissent Neighbour has 14 days to respond
4a If consent: proceed with work (no surveyor needed) Immediate
4b If dissent or no response: appoint party wall surveyor(s) Allow 4–8 weeks
5 Surveyor produces a party wall award Sets out terms, schedule of condition, and payment responsibilities
6 Begin work in accordance with the award Follow all conditions
7 After work: surveyor inspects for any damage Within reasonable time

Serving Notice

Element Detail
Form Written notice (template letters available online or from your surveyor)
How to serve Hand-deliver or send by post (keep proof)
What it must include Your name and address, the address of the building, details of the proposed work, proposed start date
Timing At least 2 months before work starts (Line of Junction or Party Structure Notice), 1 month for excavation notice
Expires If work hasn’t started within 12 months, you must serve a new notice

Three Types of Notice

Notice type When to use
Line of Junction Notice Building a new wall on or along the boundary line
Party Structure Notice Work affecting an existing party wall or party structure
Notice of Adjacent Excavation Excavation within 3 or 6 metres of neighbour’s structure

What Your Neighbour Can Do

Response What happens next
Consent (in writing) Work can proceed — no surveyor needed
Dissent (in writing) Surveyor process begins
No response within 14 days Treated as a deemed dissent — surveyor process begins

Party Wall Surveyors

Option Detail
Agreed surveyor Both parties agree on one surveyor to act for both — cheaper and simpler
Two surveyors Each party appoints their own surveyor — the two surveyors then produce the award
Third surveyor If the two surveyors can’t agree, a third surveyor is appointed to resolve the dispute

Costs

Scenario Typical cost
Neighbour consents £0 (no surveyor needed)
Agreed surveyor (simple case) £1,000–£2,000
Two surveyors (you pay both) £1,500–£3,500
Complex case (basement, major structural) £3,000–£10,000+

Important: As the building owner (the one doing the work), you usually pay all surveyor costs — both your surveyor and your neighbour’s.

The Party Wall Award

Element What it covers
Details of the work Exactly what work is permitted
Schedule of condition Photographic and written record of the neighbour’s property before work starts
Method of working How the work should be carried out
Working hours When work can take place
Access Whether access to the neighbour’s property is needed
Cost responsibility Who pays for what (usually the building owner)
Damage How any damage will be dealt with and who pays for repairs

Dispute Resolution

Issue Resolution
Disagree with the award Appeal to the County Court within 14 days
Damage caused during work Surveyor inspects and determines responsibility (usually building owner pays)
Neighbour refuses access for schedule of condition Surveyor records what they can from outside
Work doesn’t comply with the award Neighbour can seek injunction or claim for damages

Common Scenarios

Project Likely notices needed
Rear extension Party Structure Notice (if near party wall) + possible excavation notice
Loft conversion Party Structure Notice (cutting into or raising party wall)
Basement conversion Excavation notice + Party Structure Notice
Removing chimney breast Party Structure Notice
New garden wall on boundary Line of Junction Notice
Underpinning Excavation notice
Kitchen extension (side return) Party Structure Notice + possible excavation notice

Tips for a Smooth Process

Tip Detail
Talk to your neighbour first Explain your plans informally before serving legal notices
Serve notice early Don’t leave it until the last minute — aim for 3+ months before work starts
Use an experienced party wall surveyor They handle the process and reduce conflict
Pay for good schedule of condition photos Protects you if damage is disputed
Keep copies of everything Notices, responses, the award, photos
Be a good neighbour Minimise disruption, stick to agreed hours, communicate