Chartered surveyors covering Leominster and across the HR6 postcode in Herefordshire








Buying a home in HR6 means entering one of Herefordshire's most characterful property markets. The postcode covers Leominster - a historic market town on the River Lugg - along with a spread of rural villages, agricultural land, and some of the most varied housing stock in the county. The Level 2 Home Survey gives you a thorough, independent assessment of the building before you commit - covering every main element for conventional properties in reasonable condition.
With average house prices across HR6 sitting at around £319,671 for all property types, and detached homes averaging £425,558, the stakes for buyers are significant. Our surveys cost from £450 for a 3-bedroom semi-detached in HR6, and every survey is carried out by a RICS-qualified chartered surveyor. The report gives you condition ratings on every main element, flags what needs attention now and what to monitor, and highlights any specialist investigations we recommend before exchange.
HR6 has specific issues that matter to buyers: the River Lugg's flood risk affects parts of Leominster town centre, clay-rich superficial deposits across the area create shrink-swell conditions relevant to foundations, and roughly 65-80% of the housing stock is over 50 years old. That older stock - from the pre-1919 historic properties in Leominster Conservation Area to the post-war semis that dominate many of the residential roads - carries recurring defects that our inspectors know well. Booking a survey before exchange is the most effective way to understand what you're buying.

£319,671
Average House Price
£425,558
Detached Average
home.co.uk 12-month data
£257,163
Semi-Detached Average
Survey from £450
£233,047
Terraced Average
Leominster and villages
£114,500
Flat Average
homedata.co.uk 12-month data
~70%
Properties Over 50 Years Old
High survey demand
Our Level 2 Survey looks at every accessible and visible part of the property, from the roof structure and covering, chimneys, external walls and pointing, windows and doors, through to all internal rooms, floors, ceilings and walls, with a visual check of the drainage and grounds. We also inspect services so far as it is safe and accessible without specialist equipment, including the visible parts of the electrical, heating and plumbing systems.
Older homes in HR6 need a close eye in a few specific places. Leominster's pre-1919 housing, especially around the Conservation Area, is usually solid wall construction in red brick or local stone with lime mortar. That behaves very differently from cavity wall construction in terms of damp, thermal performance and upkeep. Our inspectors know what older lime mortar needs, and they pick up where modern cement repointing may have been used badly, holding moisture in rather than letting the wall breathe.
Between 1945 and 1980, a large share of HR6's housing stock was built as cavity wall brick houses with concrete roof tiles. On those properties, we pay particular attention to roof coverings and flashings, early signs of cavity wall tie failure in 1960s and 1970s homes, and the condition of flat-roofed extensions, which are common on this type of house. Any concern we find is set out clearly in the report, with condition ratings and recommendations.
Damp turns up more than anything else in HR6's older housing stock. Rising damp is seen where a property lacks an effective damp-proof course, and that affects a significant proportion of the pre-1919 and early post-war stock. Penetrating damp through failed pointing on exposed brick elevations is also common, particularly on homes in more elevated rural spots. Left unnoticed, damp leads to timber rot, which pushes up repair costs and can affect structural elements.
Roof defects are a familiar theme, especially in properties from the 1945-1980 period. Concrete tiles from this era are often at or beyond their original design life, and across HR6 we regularly note cracked or slipped tiles, tired lead flashings and failed felt underlays. Older slate roofs bring their own issues, including delaminating slates, nail sickness and poor sarking. Chimneys are plentiful in the older Leominster housing, and once the flashings fail they are a steady source of water ingress.
Timber problems, especially woodworm infestation and different forms of rot, appear regularly in the pre-1919 and 1919-1945 properties that make up 35-45% of HR6's housing. Ground-floor suspended timber floors are most at risk where sub-floor ventilation is poor, while roof timbers in slate-roofed properties can pick up wet rot after years of rainwater tracking in around failing flashings. Our inspectors use a damp meter on accessible timber elements throughout and record any readings above threshold in the report.
Outdated electrical and plumbing systems form the fourth main group of defects. Homes built from the 1950s through to the 1970s often still have original wiring that predates current safety standards, with fuse boards that lack RCD protection. Where lead pipework survives in pre-1945 properties, we flag it as a possible health concern. We note every visible sign of sub-standard services and advise specialist reports where appropriate.

Source: Herefordshire County ONS Census 2021 data applied to HR6 postcode profile.
Flood risk is a real issue for part of the HR6 market. The River Lugg runs through Leominster town centre, and properties in the river's immediate floodplain face genuine fluvial flood risk. The River Kenwater, a tributary of the Lugg, adds to the picture in certain parts of the town. Ridgemoor Brook and other local watercourses extend that risk into the surrounding area. Recent flood events have affected parts of Leominster, so flood history and flood resilience matter to buyers.
Surface water flooding is a separate but related concern, and it can affect a wider area of HR6 when drainage systems are overwhelmed by heavy rainfall. Built-up parts of Leominster are especially exposed, although rural properties with poor drainage around their boundaries can have surface water problems too. Our survey report sets out the Environment Agency flood zone for each property, notes any visible signs of past flooding, and recommends specialist flood risk assessment for homes in higher-risk locations.
Ground conditions matter across much of HR6 because of the superficial geology. Glacial till, also known as boulder clay, and river terrace deposits along the Lugg valley contain a lot of clay, so they can produce moderate to high shrink-swell behaviour. In dry weather the clay contracts and foundations can move, then when wet conditions return it expands again. Properties with shallow foundations, common in pre-1950 construction, are the most vulnerable. Our inspectors look for signs of ground movement, including diagonal cracking at structural openings and uneven floors.
Leominster town centre is a designated Conservation Area with a concentration of Grade I, Grade II*, and Grade II listed buildings spanning several centuries of construction. Buyers considering properties within the Conservation Area or in the numerous listed farmhouses, churches, and country estates across the wider HR6 area should be aware that repair and alteration works require Listed Building Consent and must comply with conservation principles. This can significantly affect the cost of addressing defects identified in a survey. We will identify any concerns through the survey, and for complex or listed properties we may recommend a RICS Level 3 Building Survey for the greater depth of analysis that historic construction demands.
Every survey we carry out in HR6 is completed by a RICS-qualified chartered surveyor. Our inspectors hold full RICS membership, carry professional indemnity cover and work to RICS standards for practice and ethics. We do not send junior staff or sub-contractors to survey inspections, the person who assesses the property is qualified, experienced and accountable.
Our HR6 inspectors know the local building traditions well. Red brick with clay tile or slate, older lime-mortared stonework and the timber-framed buildings found in parts of Leominster and the rural villages each bring different inspection priorities. An inspector who knows the 1960s cavity-wall semis that make up much of the residential stock around Leominster will know what to look for, from wall tie condition and roof tile deterioration to common extension defects.
We send reports within five working days of the inspection, and urgent findings are passed on within 24 hours where they affect time-sensitive conveyancing decisions. Every report is fully digital and includes a free follow-up consultation by phone or email with the surveyor who carried out the inspection. We go through the key findings, explain severity and cost implications, and answer any questions about the property, at no additional charge.

For a typical 3-bedroom semi-detached property, Level 2 Survey pricing in HR6 starts from £450. A 4-bedroom detached home, the most common transaction type in HR6 and averaging £425,558, usually comes in between £550 and £800 depending on size and complexity. Flats and smaller terraced properties, which average around £114,500 to £233,047 in HR6, tend to sit towards the lower end of the pricing range.
That sits slightly below the national midpoint for RICS Level 2 Surveys, which runs from £400 to £900. It reflects the area's lower average property prices when set against the national market. The quote we give is fixed and inclusive, with no extra charges for travel within the postcode area or for the post-survey consultation with the surveyor.
Against a £319,671 average-value property, a survey costing £450 to £600 is less than 0.2% of the purchase price. That small fraction can protect you from structural defects, flood history or damp issues that may cost ten or twenty times the survey fee to put right. In HR6, where approximately 70% of properties are over 50 years old, conditions-rated defects that affect value or need remediation are more likely than in areas with newer housing stock.
Prices based on a typical 3-bedroom semi-detached. Larger, older, or more complex HR6 properties will be quoted individually.
HR6 is not just about older homes, because there are also active new-build developments in the postcode, so it matters to buyers of both older properties and off-plan purchases. Persimmon Homes' Hawthorn Park development off Cholstrey Road in Leominster offers 2 to 5 bedroom homes priced from approximately £279,995 to £349,995, across terraced, semi-detached and detached house types. Stonewater Homes is also active on Cholstrey Road with a shared ownership scheme offering 2 and 3 bedroom semi-detached homes from £96,000 for a 40% share.
For buyers on new-build developments in HR6, the relevant service is a pre-completion snagging inspection rather than a RICS Level 2 Survey. Developer warranties such as NHBC Buildmark give structural protection, but they do not cover cosmetic defects or construction quality issues that do not threaten structural integrity. A professional snagging survey, carried out before legal completion, identifies every deficiency while the developer is still contractually obliged to put it right.
Our snagging surveys at Hawthorn Park, Cholstrey Road, and any other HR6 new-build development are carried out to the same professional standards as our survey work on second-hand homes. Our inspectors examine every room, external elevations, roof finishes from accessible vantage points, all services connections and boundary treatments. The report is then formatted for direct submission to the developer's customer care team, so buyers have a clear, professional record of defects to be remediated before they move in.

Enter the HR6 property details - postcode, property type, approximate number of bedrooms, and age - into our online quote tool. You'll receive a fixed price immediately, with no commitment required.
Choose from available inspection dates that fit your conveyancing timetable. For most HR6 properties, including those in Leominster and surrounding villages, we can arrange inspection within 5 to 7 working days of booking.
Our team contacts the estate agent or vendor directly to arrange access for the inspection. You don't need to attend, though you're welcome to be present. We manage the logistics so you can focus on your conveyancing.
Our RICS-qualified surveyor carries out a thorough visual inspection of the property, spending approximately 2 to 3 hours on a typical HR6 home. Older or larger properties may take longer. Every accessible element is assessed and condition-rated.
The full RICS Level 2 Survey report is delivered digitally within five working days. If the inspection reveals urgent findings - particularly anything affecting your decision to proceed or exchange - we flag these within 24 hours. The report includes condition ratings, defect descriptions, and a market valuation.
Your report includes a free consultation with the surveyor who inspected the property. We discuss the key findings, explain the condition ratings, and help you understand the implications for your purchase - whether that means negotiating on price, requesting pre-exchange repairs, or seeking further specialist reports.
Level 2 Surveys in HR6 start from £450 for a typical 3-bedroom semi-detached home. For a 4-bedroom detached property - which averages £425,558 in HR6 - costs range from £550 to £800 depending on the property's size, age, and complexity. Flats and smaller terraced homes, which average around £114,500 to £233,047, fall at the lower end. Request a personalised quote through our online tool for a fixed price based on your specific property.
Our Level 2 Survey includes a full visual inspection of all accessible parts of the property, covering the roof, walls, floors, ceilings, windows, doors, services, drainage, and grounds. Each element receives a condition rating - 1 for no repair needed, 2 for defects that need attention but are not urgent, and 3 for serious defects requiring prompt action. The report also includes a market valuation, an insurance reinstatement figure, and a summary of risks including legal matters to raise with your solicitor. Every report comes with a free follow-up consultation with the surveyor.
The on-site inspection for a typical 3 or 4 bedroom HR6 property takes approximately 2 to 3 hours. Larger detached homes, older properties with complex construction, or buildings with multiple outbuildings may take 3 to 4 hours. After the inspection, you'll receive the full written report within five working days, with urgent findings communicated sooner. We aim to fit surveys around your conveyancing timetable and can usually arrange inspection within a week of booking.
It depends on the property's location within HR6. Homes close to the River Lugg or its tributaries - particularly in Leominster town centre and the lower-lying parts of the postcode - face real fluvial flood risk. The Environment Agency flood maps show Flood Zone 2 and Flood Zone 3 designations along the Lugg corridor. Surface water flooding is a broader concern after heavy rainfall, affecting urbanised areas more widely. Our survey identifies the flood zone for the property and flags any visible evidence of past flood damage. For higher-risk properties, we recommend buyers commission a dedicated flood risk assessment before exchange.
Yes, subsidence is a relevant risk in parts of HR6 due to the boulder clay and river terrace deposits that make up much of the superficial geology. These clay-bearing materials shrink in dry conditions and expand when saturated, causing cyclic ground movement. Shallow foundations - typical in pre-1950s construction - are most susceptible. Large trees close to older properties increase the risk by extracting moisture and amplifying seasonal movement. Our inspectors specifically look for indicators of ground movement on every HR6 inspection, including characteristic cracking patterns and misaligned structural elements, and recommend structural engineer investigation where needed.
We strongly recommend a survey on any property within Leominster's Conservation Area. Properties in this area are predominantly pre-1919 or interwar, with solid masonry construction using lime mortar, older timber floors and roof structures, and roofing materials that may be well beyond their design life. Beyond the building condition, Conservation Area designation means that external alterations and repairs require planning consent and must comply with conservation guidelines - which affects the cost and approach to remediation. For listed buildings within the Conservation Area, a RICS Level 3 Building Survey often gives a more appropriate level of detail than a Level 2, given the complexity of historic construction.
HR6 has a significantly older housing stock than many postcodes. Approximately 25-30% of properties date from pre-1919, 10-15% from the interwar period, and 30-35% from the 1945-1980 era. In total, roughly 65-80% of the housing stock is over 50 years old. That proportion is one of the highest in the region, and it directly affects the value of a survey. Older properties carry a higher probability of the defects that a RICS Level 2 Survey is designed to identify - damp, roof deterioration, outdated services, timber decay, and ground movement. For properties at the more complex end of the older stock, particularly pre-1919 buildings and listed structures, we may recommend a Level 3 Building Survey.
Yes - many HR6 buyers use the survey findings as the basis for price renegotiation. With around 70% of the housing stock over 50 years old, it is common for surveys to identify maintenance items or more serious defects that have a genuine cost to address. A condition rating 3 finding - such as structural movement, significant roof deterioration, or serious damp - provides a factual, professional basis for requesting a price reduction or asking the vendor to carry out repairs before exchange. Our post-survey consultation specifically covers how to use the report findings in your negotiations, and we can provide written clarification if your solicitor or the vendor's agent requires additional detail.
Our full range of property survey services covering HR6 and Leominster
From £650
Detailed structural survey for listed buildings, pre-1919 properties, and complex HR6 homes
From £75
Energy Performance Certificate for HR6 properties - legally required for all sales and lettings
From £300
Pre-completion snagging inspection for Hawthorn Park, Cholstrey Road, and other HR6 new builds
From £150
Independent electrical safety assessment - essential for older HR6 properties
From £60
Gas safety certification for HR6 properties with gas heating and appliances
From £200
Asbestos identification survey for HR6 properties built before 2000 - particularly 1945-1980 stock
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Chartered surveyors covering Leominster and across the HR6 postcode in Herefordshire
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Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.