Drainage and sewerage might not be the most glamorous part of a property transaction, but they’re among the most important. Poor drainage, private sewers, adoption issues or hidden liabilities can all create unexpected cost and risk for buyers.
Whether a client is purchasing a new‑build home, an older property, or land for development, understanding how water leaves the site – and who’s responsible for it – is essential. This tea break read explains what drainage and sewerage constraints are, how they show up in searches, and the issues conveyancers should flag before exchange.
What Do We Mean by Drainage & Sewerage Constraints?
Every property needs safe, reliable systems for removing foul water and dealing with surface water run‑off. Constraints arise when these systems are ageing, inadequately designed, privately maintained, or governed by adoption agreements that haven’t yet been completed. They also crop up where sustainable drainage systems (SuDS) have been introduced, where drainage easements cross the land, or where historic infrastructure limits what owners can build above or near the pipes. These constraints don’t always prevent a purchase, but knowing about them early helps clients make informed, confident decisions.
Who Owns and Maintains the Drains?
Ownership is rarely obvious to clients. Some drainage systems are fully adopted and maintained by the water authority. Others include private drains or shared sewers that run beneath multiple properties.
In older areas, pipes may be a patchwork of different ages, materials and ownership arrangements. Where private drains exist, the responsibility for repair, access, and replacement can fall on the homeowner – sometimes jointly with neighbours. Newer estates may have sewers still awaiting adoption under Section 104 agreements, meaning buyers could become temporarily responsible for maintenance until adoption completes.
Surface Water vs Foul Water: Why the Distinction Matters
It’s important for clients to understand the difference. Foul water deals with waste from kitchens, bathrooms and appliances, whereas surface water manages rainwater run‑off from roofs, paving and gardens. Not all properties have separate systems. In some locations, surface water drains into combined sewers; in others, SuDS features like soakaways, attenuation tanks or permeable paving absorb rainfall on site. Misconnections (where surface water is wrongly plumbed into foul sewers or vice versa) can trigger enforcement action, flood risks and expensive repair work. Buyers need to know what system they are inheriting and whether it’s compliant.
How Do Drainage Constraints Appear in Searches?
Drainage issues can show up across several parts of the search pack, and often it’s the combination of clues – rather than a single definitive entry – that gives the clearest picture. Drainage and water searches typically highlight:
- Whether the property is connected to public foul water sewers
- Whether it is connected to public surface water systems
- The location and route of public sewers within or close to the boundary
- Any public sewer easements affecting the land
- Whether drains or sewers cross private gardens or driveways
- If the property relies on a pumping station or shared private infrastructure
- The presence of any private drains for which the homeowner will be responsible
- Whether surface water drains into the public network or to SuDS features (e.g., soakaways, attenuation tanks, swales)
- Outstanding or incomplete sewer adoption agreements (e.g., Section 104)
- Any drainage scheme charges or historic drainage notices recorded locally
Together, these markers help conveyancers assess risk, highlight potential liabilities, and plan necessary follow‑up enquiries.
For an added layer of reassurance, OneSearch DW combines water and drainage data with additional property‑level intelligence to provide a more complete view than standard drainage searches alone. It gives buyers clearer insight into sewer location, connection type, private/shared drainage responsibilities, and any constraints that may affect extensions or future works.
It’s an easy recommendation for clients purchasing older homes, properties on new estates with incomplete adoption, or anywhere drainage has been flagged as a potential concern. A small upgrade can often prevent a much larger cost later.
What Issues Should Buyers Be Aware Of?
Key risks include private sewers requiring shared maintenance; building restrictions near or over underground pipes; increased costs for repairs where infrastructure runs through a large garden or driveway; unfinished road and sewer adoption on new estates; soakaways or SuDS features needing ongoing maintenance; and surface water run‑off issues that could contribute to localised flooding. For buyers planning extensions or outbuildings, drainage constraints may dictate where foundations can go or whether diversion of a sewer is needed — which can significantly increase project costs.
What About New‑Build Developments?
On modern estates, sewers are often awaiting adoption, and the timing can be uncertain. If adoption under a Section 104 agreement is delayed, residents may temporarily be responsible for maintenance. Surface water management on new developments increasingly relies on SuDS — ponds, swales, basins, underground tanks — which may be managed by private companies, management companies or the local authority. Buyers should know who maintains these assets and what charges apply.
Insurance, Lending and Practical Considerations
Drainage issues can influence insurance premiums, particularly in areas with a history of sewer flooding or surface water flooding. Lenders may also raise enquiries if private drainage is involved or if searches flag unresolved adoption questions. Clients should be encouraged to provide insurers with accurate drainage information early to avoid later complications.
Drainage and sewerage constraints may sit below the surface – literally and figuratively – but they play a major role in how a property functions, what it costs to maintain, and what a buyer can build in future. By helping clients understand who owns the drains, what the searches reveal, and any limitations that might affect development or maintenance, conveyancers can reduce surprises and keep transactions running smoothly.
Commons registration and village green rights are some of the most powerful (and often most surprising) constraints a buyer can encounter. They can restrict development, dictate long‑established public access, and even prevent routine changes to land use.
Yet many clients only hear about them for the first time during conveyancing. This short guide explains what commons and village greens are, how they’re recorded, and why they matter for property transactions of all kinds.
What Are Common Land and Village Greens?
Common land refers to land over which certain people – historically “commoners” – hold traditional rights, such as grazing or collecting wood. Village greens are areas traditionally used by local communities for recreation, sports, dog walking or community events. Both types of land are legally protected and cannot be developed or enclosed without specific statutory processes. Even where the land looks unremarkable on the ground, registration as common land or as a village green has a powerful legal effect that can override private ownership ambitions.
How Are They Registered?
Since the 1960s, local authorities have kept statutory registers of common land and town or village greens. These registers record the exact boundary of the land, ownership details (where known), and any rights that exist over it. Registration provides certainty: once land is registered, those public rights are exceptionally difficult to remove. Importantly, registration doesn’t always mean the land is large or well‑known – small pockets, verges, and strips of seemingly unused land can all be listed, and these are often the ones that catch buyers unaware.
Why Does This Matter in Conveyancing?
Registration can have major implications for current and future use. A buyer cannot simply fence off, build on, change or resurface registered land. Stopping up rights of access is extremely difficult. Where a property includes – or abuts – a piece of registered common or village green, that status can have a direct impact on garden extensions, driveways, parking, landscaping, access improvements and development value. Even where the registered land is not being purchased, if it lies adjacent to the boundary, it can limit what the buyer may do and may affect saleability later.
How Do These Appear in Searches?
Local Authority Searches can reveal whether the land being purchased is registered as common land or a village green. However, the search result may only show entries for the land itself, not neighbouring land. This means buyers may still be affected by rights over nearby land even if the register doesn’t flag a direct charge. Planning history can also hint at these issues, especially where previous applications have been refused or restricted due to community use, public access, or longstanding recreational rights. Conveyancers should pay particular attention to boundary plans and any areas used informally by local residents.
What Risks Should Buyers Be Aware Of?
Buyers may unintentionally assume they can improve access, add parking, extend into a side garden, or incorporate an adjoining strip into their title, only to later discover the land is protected. Owners who obstruct or interfere with common land or village green rights may face enforcement action, criminal penalties, or civil challenges. Even if a buyer has no immediate development plans, the presence of registered land nearby can influence valuation, lender comfort and future marketability. It’s also worth noting that local communities can apply to register new village greens, sometimes triggered when land is threatened by development.
Can Registration Be Removed or Changed?
In practice, deregistering land or removing village green status is extremely difficult. There are narrow statutory procedures, but they usually require offering replacement land or proving that the land was wrongly registered. For most homeowners and small developers, these routes are neither simple nor quick. This is why early identification is crucial: buyers need to know how the land is designated before they rely on being able to alter it.
Commons registration and village green rights are powerful legal protections that can significantly influence what a buyer can do with land now and in the future. They can appear in unexpected places and come with consequences that aren’t always obvious at first glance.
By checking the registers early, reviewing boundary detail carefully, and helping clients understand the limits these designations impose, conveyancers can prevent misunderstandings and ensure plans remain realistic from day one.
Houses in Multiple Occupation appear in conveyancing more often than clients realise.
Whether your buyer is an investor, a landlord expanding their portfolio, or simply someone purchasing a home that’s been used for shared living, HMOs can bring a layer of regulation, licensing and compliance that needs to be handled carefully.
This short guide breaks down what HMOs are, why they matter in a transaction, and what conveyancers should flag early.
What Is an HMO?
An HMO is a property where three or more people from more than one household live together and share basic amenities such as a kitchen, bathroom or living area. The classic scenario is student housing or young professionals sharing a home, but HMOs take many forms: converted houses, larger shared homes, bedsits or purpose-built shared accommodation. Importantly, the HMO definition is set in law, and local authorities have the power to impose additional licensing requirements depending on local issues and housing needs.
When Does an HMO Need a Licence?
Some HMOs require mandatory licensing — typically where five or more unrelated people share facilities. However, many councils also operate “additional licensing” schemes that capture smaller HMOs, and these schemes vary from area to area. A property that didn’t need a licence last year might need one now under a revised local policy. Licensing conditions often cover fire safety, room sizes, amenities, management standards and the condition of the communal areas. If a property is being sold with tenants in place, buyers may inherit a licensing requirement from day one.
How Do HMOs Appear in Searches and Planning History?
HMO licensing itself doesn’t always appear on Local Authority Searches, but planning records may show a prior change of use or HMO‑related conditions. Enforcement history can also surface through local authority enquiries. Some environmental reports highlight areas heavily populated with HMOs, while tenancy schedules and seller replies (such as TA6 or TA7 forms) may confirm whether the property has been used as an HMO. In some cases, fire risk assessments or electrical safety certificates hint at HMO occupation even when not explicitly stated.
HMO Licensing vs Planning Permission
Clients often assume that HMO licensing and planning permission are the same thing, but they’re completely separate systems with different purposes. Planning permission governs the use of the property – for example, changing from a single dwelling (C3) to a small HMO (C4), or to a larger sui generis HMO.
Licensing, on the other hand, deals with the safety, standards and management of the home, including fire measures, amenities and occupancy limits. A property can have the correct planning use but still need an HMO licence, and it’s equally possible for a property to hold a licence even though planning permission for HMO use has not been secured. The key message for clients is simple: neither system substitutes for the other, and both must be right for the tenancy to be compliant.
What Should Buyers Be Aware Of?
If a buyer intends to continue renting the property as an HMO, they must ensure that the appropriate licence is in place or be prepared to apply for one before tenants move in. Buying an unlicensed HMO can expose a new landlord to enforcement action, rent repayment orders or penalties. If the buyer intends to convert the property back to a single dwelling, they should know whether any planning changes need to be reversed. For investors, understanding local licensing schemes also matters – some councils restrict the number or density of HMOs in certain neighbourhoods.
What About Lender and Insurance Requirements?
Some mortgage lenders have specific requirements for HMOs due to the increased risk profile and management responsibilities. Specialist buy‑to‑let or HMO products may be required. Insurers may ask about occupancy levels, fire safety measures, alarms, locks and escape routes before offering cover. Ensuring clients understand this early avoids last‑minute complications when arranging finance.
HMOs add an additional regulatory layer to a transaction, but with the right due diligence, they are entirely manageable. By helping clients understand how licensing works, how it differs from planning, and what obligations they may inherit on completion, conveyancers can give clear, practical advice that reduces risk and supports confident buying decisions – whether for an investor or a first‑time landlord.
Ground instability is a quiet but important concern in conveyancing, especially in areas with historic mining, chalk or limestone geology, old quarries, or complex underground infrastructure.
While full sinkholes are rare, the underlying risks – from subsidence to unexpected voids – can affect property condition, insurability and even mortgageability. This quick blog helps conveyancers explain what ground instability means, how it relates to sinkhole formation, and what clients should be aware of when making informed decisions.
What Is Ground Instability?
Ground instability refers to movement, weakening or collapse of the ground beneath a property. It can be caused by natural geological processes, such as dissolution of soluble rocks like chalk or limestone, or by human activity, such as historical mining, tunnelling, quarrying, landfill settlement or old infrastructure failures. Some instability issues progress slowly over time, while others can develop suddenly, which is why environmental searches commonly flag increased risk zones.
How Do Sinkholes Fit Into the Picture?
Sinkholes are one of the most visible (and sometimes alarming) forms of ground instability. They occur when the ground beneath a property collapses into a void, usually created by dissolving limestone, chalk or salt deposits, or by the collapse of an unrecorded mine or man‑made cavity. While dramatic media coverage sometimes gives the impression that sinkholes are common, they remain relatively rare. However, when they do occur, they can cause serious structural damage and require major engineering work.
Where Are Instability Risks More Likely?
Risk often aligns with historic activity or local geology. Former mining areas – coal, chalk, tin, gypsum and other minerals – may contain old shafts, adits or unrecorded workings. Certain regions with limestone or chalk bedrock are naturally more prone to dissolution features. Areas with clay soils may experience shrink‑swell movement during periods of extreme weather. Urban sites built over old landfills or backfilled quarries can experience settlement. Even infrastructure such as leaking drains, broken sewers or failed soakaways can trigger localised collapse beneath driveways or extensions.
How Does This Appear in Searches?
Environmental searches typically assess ground stability risks through national databases, mining records, landfill mapping, historic land use and geological models. They may flag: potential for natural cavities; historic mining activity; known sinkhole incidents; ground that is prone to shrink‑swell clay movement; and areas where subsidence claims have been concentrated. Additional specialist searches from Landmark, such as mining reports, coal authority searches or ground stability assessments, can provide more granular detail. Conveyancers should help clients interpret the difference between a “potential risk” and an “actionable concern”.
What Should Clients Be Aware Of?
Clients should understand that a flagged ground instability risk does not automatically mean the property is unsafe. Instead, it highlights that further checks may be sensible. Clients may need to consider property age, structural history, drainage condition, and whether there have been previous insurance claims for subsidence or movement. Modern homes often incorporate foundations designed for local geology, but older properties may be more vulnerable to underlying ground changes. For planned extensions or significant landscaping, ground conditions may dictate foundation type and cost.
What About Insurance and Mortgage Lenders?
Subsidence and ground instability can influence premiums, excess levels and insurer willingness to cover certain risks. Lenders may ask for more information if a search highlights past instability or historic mining. If a survey or structural report identifies movement, buyers may need to provide additional evidence that the issue is historic, monitored, or already remediated. Promptly addressing insurer or lender queries prevents delays later in the transaction.
Ground instability and sinkhole risk are important but manageable considerations in property transactions. Most flagged risks do not result in dramatic events, but they do warrant thoughtful due diligence.
By helping clients understand the nature of local geology, historic activity and what search results really mean, conveyancers can guide them through practical next steps, whether that’s seeking a structural opinion, engaging with insurers early or simply proceeding with informed confidence.
Areas of Special Control of Advertisements – often shortened to ASCAs – are one of those quiet pieces of planning legislation that clients seldom hear about until a sign, board or fascia change suddenly needs consent.
For properties in sensitive or scenic areas, Areas of Special Control of Advertisements can significantly restrict what can be displayed and how it is displayed. Here’s a concise guide to help conveyancers explain the essentials to clients in just a few minutes.
What Are Areas of Special Control of Advertisements?
ASCAs are designated zones where the local planning authority applies stricter rules on the size, height, illumination and appearance of outdoor advertisements. These areas are typically chosen for their landscape value, character, or environmental quality: rural locations, National Parks, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty and other visually sensitive settings. The purpose is simple: to prevent visual clutter or intrusive signage in places where scenery or character is considered particularly important.
How Do ASCAs Affect What Clients Can Display?
Within an ASCA, the advertising rules become much tighter than the standard national regulations. The size of illuminated signs may be limited; high‑level signs might be prohibited; fascia boards must often be smaller or non‑illuminated; and freestanding boards, banners or large promotional displays may be heavily restricted or require express consent. Even signs that would normally have “deemed consent” outside an ASCA may lose that automatic permission once inside the boundary. For shopfronts, small businesses, rural commercial premises and even residential properties placing directional or name signs, these limitations can meaningfully shape what is allowed.
Will ASCAs Show Up in Searches?
ASCAs can appear in planning history, local plans, and sometimes as entries referenced within local land charges. However, they don’t always present themselves clearly in search results. More commonly, the restrictions become obvious only when reviewing past planning conditions or when clients attempt to install new signage. Because ASCAs are area‑wide rather than property‑specific, buyers might not see a direct charge on their title. This is why early awareness is important – clients planning to rebrand, add illuminated signage or modernise a shopfront should know whether ASCAs will influence their design choices.
How Might This Impact Buyers and Businesses?
For commercial buyers, especially small retailers, cafes, estate agents, salons and offices, ASCAs influence branding decisions and may affect the viability of certain illuminated or large‑format signs. For residential buyers, the impact is usually subtle but may still matter… for example, installing a name plaque, external lighting, or signage for holiday lets. If clients plan to take over an existing business and rebrand it immediately after completion, understanding ASCA restrictions upfront helps prevent costly redesigns or delayed opening.
What Should Conveyancers Flag Early?
It’s worth checking whether the property lies within or near a designated rural or scenic zone and reviewing planning histories for any mention of advertisement conditions. Ask clients whether they plan to alter signage, illumination or branding. If so, advise them that express consent may be required in ASCAs even where it wouldn’t be elsewhere. Remind them that advertising rules focus on two things: visual amenity and public safety – and in ASCAs, amenity considerations carry particular weight. A simple heads‑up at the start of the transaction can prevent later disappointment.
Areas of Special Control of Advertisements strengthen the rules around signage to preserve the character of sensitive landscapes. While they rarely cause legal issues during a conveyance, they can shape what a buyer is permitted to display once they take ownership. By highlighting ASCA restrictions early – especially for commercial premises – conveyancers can help clients make informed branding and design decisions that respect both planning rules and the unique setting of the area.
Completion Notices are one of those planning tools that rarely appear in everyday conversation but can have a real impact on buyers, developers and anyone relying on an existing planning permission.
They’re often misunderstood, especially because the name sounds similar to completion certificates – but they are entirely different things. Here’s a quick, clear guide for clients and conveyancers on what Completion Notices are, when they’re used and why they matter in a property transaction.
What Is a Completion Notice?
A Completion Notice is issued by a local planning authority when it believes that development which has started will not be completed within a reasonable period.
The effect of the notice is to set a deadline: if the development is not finished by the date given, the planning permission will be treated as having expired for any incomplete work. In other words, the permission is “switched off” for the unfinished parts of the project. A Completion Notice does not force anyone to finish the work, it simply removes the protection of the existing planning permission after a specified date.
When Are Completion Notices Used?
Completion Notices are typically used where a planning permission has technically been implemented, but then left unfinished for months or years. Sometimes this is because the developer mothballs the project; sometimes because the property has changed hands; sometimes because the market has shifted.
Councils can issue a Completion Notice when they believe the planning permission is being kept alive without real intent to complete. It is not a punitive measure – it is a tidying-up mechanism to prevent open‑ended permissions remaining valid indefinitely.
What Does a Completion Notice Do?
The notice sets out a completion date, usually at least 12 months from the date it is served. If the work is finished by that deadline, the permission remains lawful. If not, any incomplete elements lose the benefit of that permission and future works would require a fresh application. Importantly, a Completion Notice does not affect work already lawfully completed – only the unfinished parts are at risk. This distinction matters for buyers inheriting part‑built extensions, conversions, shopfront works or redevelopment schemes.
How Do Completion Notices Affect Conveyancing?
If a property involves unfinished works or has an historic planning permission that was only partially implemented, a Completion Notice can materially affect value, development potential and mortgageability. Buyers may assume they can pick up where the previous owner left off… but a Completion Notice may limit what can still be lawfully completed without a new permission.
Lenders may also ask questions if a planning permission is close to expiry or if the remaining works are substantial. For developers purchasing stalled sites, understanding whether a Completion Notice has been issued, or could realistically be issued, is essential due diligence.
Will Completion Notices Show Up in Searches?
Completion Notices can appear in Local Authority searches when formally served, but they are not as common as enforcement notices. Sometimes the only evidence is in the planning history, which may reference a pending notice, consultation on a proposed notice or an intention to issue one. Because the effect of a Completion Notice is tied to the status of an existing planning permission, conveyancers should always check the planning timeline: When was the permission granted? Was it materially started? How much work was done? Does the council appear to consider the permission dormant?
What Should Buyers and Developers Look Out For?
Clients should be aware of any part‑built structures, groundworks or foundations that were installed solely to “keep a permission alive”. They should also understand that finishing the work may still require compliance with updated building regulations or new planning policies, even if the original permission is technically still in play. Where a Completion Notice has been served, buyers need to know the cut‑off date and whether the remaining works are realistically achievable within the timeframe. Where no notice has yet been served, but the project has been dormant for years, it’s sensible to advise that the council could tighten the timeline.
Completion Notices are a planning tool designed to bring clarity to long‑stalled developments. They don’t punish owners, and they don’t invalidate completed work – but they do remove the safety net of an old planning permission if the project isn’t finished by a specified date.
For conveyancers, the key is to spot early when a transaction involves part‑completed development, long‑dated permissions or dormant projects. A simple review of planning history and a discussion with the client can prevent surprises later and ensure they know exactly what they can – and cannot – lawfully complete after purchase.