Homebuyer survey roof problems
Useful when a Level 2 or Level 3 survey flags roof age, slipped slates, missing tiles, chimney defects, flashing concerns, sagging or flat roof wear.
A pre-purchase roof report is designed for buyers whose survey has raised roof concerns and who need written roof evidence before exchange. It can help you understand visible defects, likely repair routes and estimated repair guidance before you commit to the purchase.
A homebuyer survey can flag roof problems without explaining what the repair route may look like or what the roof could cost after completion. A pre-purchase roof report gives you a roof-focused written view before the property becomes your responsibility.
The aim is not to replace your survey. It is to help you understand visible roof defects, photos, likely urgency, repair guidance and estimated cost ranges where possible before you decide whether to proceed, ask questions or discuss the purchase further.
Surveyors often use cautious language because they may only have a limited view of the roof. That can leave you with phrases such as roof needs replacing, roof has limited remaining life, chimney stack defects, poor flashing or surveyor recommends roofing contractor.
A written pre-purchase roof inspection report gives you a more practical next step. It records what could be inspected safely, what visible defects were noted, where photos were taken and whether issues appear urgent, future maintenance or likely to need further investigation.
This page is for buyers who need a written roof report before buying a house, not a general roofing enquiry after they already own the property.
Useful when a Level 2 or Level 3 survey flags roof age, slipped slates, missing tiles, chimney defects, flashing concerns, sagging or flat roof wear.
Helpful when you need photos, access notes, visible defect comments and estimated repair cost guidance before committing to the purchase.
Common for Victorian terraces, Edwardian homes, 1930s semis, slate roofs, chimneys, rear flat roofs and properties with older roof coverings.
A pre-purchase roof report does not replace your survey. It gives a more roof-focused written view of visible issues where safe access allows.
| Survey wording may say | A pre-purchase roof report can help clarify |
|---|---|
| Roof covering has limited remaining life | Visible condition, likely repair route, whether defects appear localised or more widespread, and estimated cost guidance where possible. |
| Slipped slates, missing tiles or cracked tiles | Photos of visible defects, likely urgency, possible water entry risk and whether more roof areas appear affected from accessible viewpoints. |
| Chimney, ridge or lead flashing concerns | Visible chimney stack condition, flaunching, pointing, ridge mortar, flashing defects and whether scaffold or further access may be needed. |
| Further inspection by a roofing contractor recommended | A written roof inspection report for the purchase file, with access limitations and next steps explained in plain English. |
The more detail you send at enquiry stage, the easier it is to confirm whether the £349 Pre-Purchase Roof Report, a limited roof check or another report route is suitable.
If you are close to exchange, include your deadline clearly. Access usually needs to be approved by the seller, estate agent, managing agent or current owner before an inspection can be arranged.
Send Survey CommentsRoof Reports provides visual, non-invasive roof condition reports based on visible and safely accessible areas at the time of inspection. Reports are not a RICS survey, structural survey, valuation, guarantee or warranty.
Where structural movement, hidden defects, unsafe access or specialist concerns are identified, further investigation may be recommended. Estimated repair costs are guidance only unless a separate formal quotation is provided by the contractor.
Send the property and survey details first. We review the likely scope before the inspection is arranged, so the report route is matched to the roof concerns raised.
Tell us the address, property type and where you are in the buying process.
Share the roof section of your homebuyer survey, Level 2 survey or Level 3 survey.
Where possible, we coordinate access with the estate agent or seller and assign a suitable roofing contractor.
You get photos, visible defect notes, repair guidance and estimated costs where possible.
The report is written around the house purchase and the survey concerns you provide. It can include visible roof condition notes, access limitations, photos, urgent and future repair guidance, and estimated cost guidance where possible.
It also explains what could not be confirmed from a visual inspection. If hidden defects, structural movement, unsafe access or specialist issues are suspected, the report may recommend further investigation before exchange or after completion.
See a Sample Roof Report
Most home buyers choose the £349 Pre-Purchase Roof Report when a survey has flagged several roof concerns or the likely repair cost is unclear before exchange.
If you are comparing roof report cost before you enquire, a roof report is a small upfront cost compared with discovering that the property needs thousands spent on roof repairs after completion.
From £249
For simple, single-issue checks only.
Ask If This Is Suitable£349
Quoted After Review
These illustrative examples show why buyers often request written roof evidence before exchange. Repair costs, seller response and negotiation outcomes vary.
Example repair cost risk identified: £4,250
Typical buyer concern: Survey wording mentioned slipped slates, chimney flaunching and ridge mortar on a Victorian terrace.
Possible negotiation support: The report helped the buyer understand urgent repairs and likely future roof maintenance before exchange.
Buyer next step: The buyer used the photos and repair notes to ask for the roof defects to be reflected in the purchase discussion.
Example repair cost risk identified: £14,500
Typical buyer concern: A survey suggested the main roof may be at the end of its life and warned that replacement costs could be significant.
Possible negotiation support: The report set out visible age-related wear, failed mortar, tile defects and why replacement budgeting was sensible before exchange.
Buyer next step: The buyer used the written roof condition report to support a larger renegotiation before deciding whether to proceed.
Example repair cost risk identified: £7,000
Typical buyer concern: A homebuyer survey flagged localised sagging and recommended further roof checks before purchase.
Possible negotiation support: The report explained the visible concerns and recommended further investigation before the buyer committed.
Buyer next step: The buyer paused exchange until the roof movement concern had been reviewed with clearer evidence.
Example repair cost risk identified: £2,800
Typical buyer concern: Survey comments mentioned ridge tiles, lead flashing and possible water entry points near a chimney.
Possible negotiation support: Photos, notes and estimated repair guidance helped the buyer discuss the roof defects with the seller.
Buyer next step: The repair guidance gave the buyer a more practical figure to discuss than the original survey wording alone.
Example repair cost risk identified: £5,500
Typical buyer concern: The buyer was concerned about a rear extension flat roof with visible wear and ponding risk.
Possible negotiation support: The report separated urgent concerns from future replacement planning and gave budget guidance.
Buyer next step: The buyer used the flat roof section to budget for short-term repairs and possible future replacement.
Example repair cost risk identified: £3,000
Typical buyer concern: The survey noted missing tiles, moss growth and evidence of older patch repairs on a tiled roof.
Possible negotiation support: The buyer used the written roof report to understand repair priority and likely access costs.
Buyer next step: The visible defect photos helped keep the discussion focused on specific repairs rather than general roof worry.
Example repair cost risk identified: £3,750
Typical buyer concern: Survey wording raised concerns about chimney stack mortar, flaunching and leadwork condition.
Possible negotiation support: The report gave a clearer breakdown of visible chimney defects and likely repair options.
Buyer next step: The buyer shared the chimney notes with their solicitor when raising enquiries before exchange.
Example repair cost risk identified: £6,200
Typical buyer concern: A buyer of an older terrace wanted a roof survey after the surveyor raised slipped slate concerns.
Possible negotiation support: The report highlighted visible slate defects, roofline condition and areas that could not be safely checked.
Buyer next step: The access limitations helped the buyer understand what was known and what remained uncertain.
Example repair cost risk identified: £1,850
Typical buyer concern: The homebuyer survey mentioned leaking gutters, staining and possible roofline deterioration.
Possible negotiation support: The written report helped the buyer distinguish roof covering concerns from gutter and fascia repairs.
Buyer next step: The buyer used the report to separate minor roofline works from higher-priority roof covering repairs.
Example repair cost risk identified: £4,900
Typical buyer concern: A property with a kitchen extension had survey comments about a flat roof and ageing rooflights.
Possible negotiation support: The report gave photo evidence, access notes and cost guidance for urgent and future works.
Buyer next step: The buyer used the rooflight and flat roof notes to agree a more realistic maintenance budget.
These examples are illustrative unless marked as verified customer outcomes. Repair costs, savings and negotiation outcomes vary. A roof report does not guarantee a price reduction, seller contribution, mortgage approval or purchase outcome. You can view roof report pricing or read about pre-purchase roof reports.
Recent feedback from buyers who requested roof reports after a survey raised concerns.
Our Level 2 survey mentioned slipped slates and chimney defects, but we did not know what was urgent. The roof report explained the visible issues clearly and the photos were useful for our solicitor.
We booked a roof survey after our homebuyer report flagged lead flashing and gutter issues. The written report gave us a sensible repair range before we decided how to proceed.
The survey wording made it sound like the roof might need replacing. The report separated urgent repairs from longer-term maintenance, which made the conversation with the estate agent easier.
We wanted a home buyer roof survey because the property had an older tiled roof and a rear flat roof. The report gave practical notes, photos and cost guidance where possible.
Our survey mentioned ridge mortar and possible roof movement. The report helped us understand what was visible on the day and where further investigation was sensible before exchange.
We were close to exchange and needed roof advice quickly. The photos, access notes and future works section helped us understand the likely next steps without panic.
Our flat purchase had a shared roof and access was awkward. The report was clear about what could be seen, what could not be checked safely and what further investigation might be needed.
The Roof Reports team helped arrange access through the estate agent. The written findings were plain English and focused on the roof issues raised in our survey.
The homebuyer survey said the roof was approaching the end of its economic life. The roof report gave us a clearer view of what was visible and what might need budgeting for.
We had no idea whether the missing tiles were a small repair or a bigger problem. The report photos and notes made it much easier to understand before exchange.
The roof survey was arranged around estate agent access and the written findings arrived in a clear format. It gave us something practical to discuss with our solicitor.
Our surveyor recommended getting the roof checked by a specialist. The roof report covered the ridge tiles, gutters and chimney concerns in a way we could actually use.
The report did not overstate anything. It set out visible defects, limitations and repair guidance, which helped us make a calmer decision on the property.
We needed a written roof report for a house purchase after damp roof timbers were mentioned. The notes were clear about what could be inspected and what needed further checks.
The flat roof section was our main worry. The report helped us understand likely repair costs and which items were urgent compared with future maintenance.
Our homebuyer survey listed roof issues but gave very little detail. The roof report was much clearer and the photos helped us talk through the problem areas.
We were buying an older terrace with a slate roof. The report helped us understand slipped slates, chimney flashing and likely future repair planning.
The written roof condition report gave us enough information to decide whether to continue. It was practical, careful and did not promise anything it could not verify.
We had a tight exchange deadline and needed roof reports quickly. The access notes, defect photos and estimated repair guidance made the next step much clearer.
The survey raised concerns about gutters, moss and possible roof felt issues. The report helped separate visible roof defects from items that needed further investigation.
Roof Reports can help buyers arrange written roof reports in major towns and cities where suitable contractors and safe access are available.
A pre-purchase roof report is a written visual roof condition report for someone buying a property. It focuses on visible and safely accessible roof areas, survey concerns, photos, defect notes, repair guidance and estimated cost guidance where possible before exchange.
You should request a roof report when your homebuyer survey, Level 2 survey or Level 3 survey flags roof problems, roof age, slipped slates, missing tiles, chimney defects, flat roof concerns, sagging or possible replacement costs. It is best to enquire before exchange so access and timing can be reviewed.
No. A pre-purchase roof report is not a RICS survey, structural survey, valuation, guarantee or warranty. It is a practical visual roof inspection report prepared by an experienced roofing contractor based on what can be seen and accessed safely on the inspection day.
Yes. Because you usually do not own the property before completion, access needs to be agreed by the seller, estate agent, managing agent or current owner. Roof Reports can help with estate agent access coordination where possible.
A written roof report may help support purchase discussions by giving clearer evidence of visible roof defects, photos and estimated repair guidance where possible. It does not guarantee a price reduction, seller contribution, mortgage approval or purchase outcome.
The £349 Pre-Purchase Roof Report is designed for most buyers whose survey has raised roof concerns. It can include written findings, photos, survey comment review, visible defect notes, roof covering observations, chimney, ridge, flashing and gutter comments where visible, urgent and future repair guidance, access notes and estimated repair cost guidance where possible.
Tell us about the property, what your survey has flagged and how quickly you need advice. We review the details first so we can confirm the suitable report type, access requirements and availability.
You can also view roof report pricing or read our report standards before enquiring.
Want to know what happens after you enquire? See the next steps below the form.
Access must be approved by the seller, estate agent or managing agent before an inspection can take place.
Send the survey comments, property address and estate agent details. We will help confirm whether a pre-purchase roof report is suitable.