Mortgages & Property
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 |
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