Fixed-fee quotes, live case tracking, and No Completion No Fee








Telford and Wrekin conveyancing is the legal work that moves a sale or purchase from offer to keys. Our panel of regulated conveyancing solicitors handle the title checks, searches, contract work and SDLT submission, while our completion team keeps the case moving. You get a fixed-fee quote, live online tracking, and No Completion No Fee on standard cases.
homedata.co.uk records put the borough's average sold price at £222,000 in February 2026, with detached homes at £346,000 and flats and maisonettes at £99,000. That spread changes the shape of the legal work, because a leasehold flat brings different questions from a freehold house. home.co.uk's national average asking price sits at £437,474 in May 2026, so a local buyer or seller in Telford and Wrekin may be working from a very different price point.

£222,000
Average sold price
£346,000
Detached homes
£204,000
Semi-detached homes
£174,000
Terraced homes
£99,000
Flats and maisonettes
+2.6%
12-month price change
£255,000
West Midlands average sold price
+1.2%
West Midlands 12-month change
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
For a purchase, we instruct your solicitor once your offer has been accepted and the ID checks are done. The solicitor reviews the draft contract, title register, fixtures list and any lease terms if the property is leasehold. They order the usual searches, which normally include a Local Authority search, Drainage and Water search and Environmental search. In Telford and Wrekin, the local authority search is the one that can flag planning permissions, building regulation sign-off and highway adoption issues.
For a sale, the work starts with the contract pack. Your solicitor pulls together the title documents, replies to enquiries and, where needed, documents for alterations such as extensions or window replacements. If the title is missing old deeds, that can slow things down. Chain length matters too, because every linked sale or purchase has to line up before exchange can happen.
The figures show a borough where flats and maisonettes sit at £99,000 and detached homes at £346,000, so the legal work can look different from one property to the next. A freehold house on a straightforward title is usually simpler than a leasehold flat with service charge accounts, landlord consents and management information. Our panel of regulated solicitors deal with both.
Source: homedata.co.uk sold-price data from the brief, February 2026
Most freehold purchases in Telford and Wrekin run to 8-12 weeks, but leasehold work often takes 12-16 weeks. The extra time usually comes from management packs, replies from landlords or agents, and any follow-up on service charge figures. If a chain runs through several linked transactions, the timeline stretches again.
Our live case tracking shows where the file stands, so you do not have to chase for every update. Exchange is the point where the deal becomes binding, and completion is when money moves and keys change hands. Missing deeds, delayed searches and slow mortgage offers are the usual hold-ups.

Start with a fixed-fee quote from our legal team. We show the cost upfront, including common add-ons such as leasehold or new-build work where needed.
Once you are happy, we instruct your solicitor and open the file. Identity checks, source-of-funds checks and key paperwork are taken care of at this point.
Your solicitor orders the Local Authority, Drainage and Water, and Environmental searches, then raises enquiries on the title, lease or contract pack.
If there is a mortgage, the solicitor reviews the lender's instructions and checks the offer. Any issue with boundaries, title restrictions or lease terms is chased down before exchange.
Both sides agree the final terms and exchange signed contracts. From this moment the deal is binding, so the completion date matters.
Money transfers, keys are released, SDLT is submitted, and the solicitor registers the change of ownership with the Land Registry.
A conveyancing quote is worth getting before you make an offer on a house in Telford and Wrekin. It helps you spot leasehold costs, SDLT and search fees before the numbers get tight, and it means you know whether No Completion No Fee applies to your case.
The borough's price spread is wide enough to change how buyers approach each file. A flat or maisonette at £99,000 will usually bring different lender checks, lease terms and service charge questions than a detached house at £346,000. That matters on both the legal side and the survey side. Our panel of regulated solicitors see the same pattern every week.
Leasehold properties need extra reading. Ground rent, service charge, reserve funds, repair obligations and any restriction on subletting or pets all sit in the lease, not in the sales brochure. If the seller cannot produce management accounts or replies to enquiries quickly, a leasehold case in Telford and Wrekin can slow down even when the mortgage offer is ready.
Freehold homes are usually simpler, but title issues still crop up. Extensions, garage conversions and altered boundaries need paperwork, and the Local Authority search checks whether the right consents were obtained. Environmental searches can also matter if a buyer or lender wants reassurance about land risk, drainage history or contamination flags before exchange.
The 12-month rise of +2.6% is a useful reminder that a small price change can still shift SDLT, lender stress tests and moving budgets. A seller at £174,000 in a terraced house may be fielding different questions from a buyer at £346,000 in a detached home, even before the contract pack lands. That is why the legal work has to be matched to the property, not just the postcode.
A fixed-fee conveyancing quote is only part of the bill. You still need to allow for searches, Land Registry fees and SDLT where it applies, and those charges vary with price and tenure. For Telford and Wrekin purchases, a straight freehold case can be much lighter on extras than a leasehold flat with management paperwork.
Homemove quotes start from £495 for a purchase, £495 for a sale, and £895 for a sale and purchase. Leasehold work is usually an add-on of £150-£250, new-build work is typically £100-£200 extra, and SDLT submission is included. Land Registry fees are scaled by purchase price, usually around £20-£910, while local authority searches are typically £100-£300 depending on the council.
SDLT is charged using the current England rates. The main bands are 0% to £250k, 5% from £250k to £925k, 10% from £925k to £1.5M, and 12% above £1.5M. First-time buyers get 0% to £425k, 5% from £425k to £625k, and no relief above £625k, while second-home and buy-to-let purchases usually carry a 5% surcharge.

A chain is the most common delay. One slow mortgage offer or one missing search result can hold up several linked moves, and that is just as true on a £99,000 flat as it is on a £346,000 detached home. If you are buying and selling at the same time, our team keeps both files moving together.
Leasehold work is another hold-up point. Management companies do not always send papers quickly, and the replies on service charge, ground rent and insurance can take longer than the client expects. A seller with an older lease may also need a deed of variation, a licence to assign or a reminder about arrears before exchange can take place.
Survey results can slow things down too. A Level 2 report might flag roof wear, damp staining or timber movement, while a Level 3 survey can go deeper on older or altered homes. If the survey or valuation uncovers a defect, the solicitor may need to ask for repairs, a retention or extra paperwork before the buyer signs off.
Missing deeds still crop up. Older homes sometimes have paper records that have not been filed neatly, and that means the solicitor has to piece the title together from multiple documents. In a borough where Local data shows a wide gap between flats at £99,000 and detached homes at £346,000, that extra checking can make a real difference to timing.
A freehold purchase usually takes 8-12 weeks, while a leasehold purchase often takes 12-16 weeks. Chain length, mortgage checks, missing deeds and slow replies from a management company can push that out.
The usual delays are leasehold management packs, late mortgage offers, search results and missing paperwork on alterations. In Telford and Wrekin, a house at £346,000 and a flat at £99,000 may face different issues, but the delay points are often the same.
Yes, leasehold files usually cost more because there is extra legal work on the lease, service charge accounts and management enquiries. At Homemove, leasehold work is typically an add-on of £150-£250 on top of the core fee.
Yes, and that is usually the best time to do it. A quote before you offer on a home in Telford and Wrekin gives you a clearer view of the legal fee, search costs and SDLT before you commit.
If one party pulls out, the linked files can stall or stop. Our completion team keeps you updated through live case tracking, so you know whether the issue is a search delay, a mortgage problem or a change in the chain.
After completion, the solicitor submits SDLT where needed and registers the transfer with the Land Registry. You may also receive confirmation of registration later, which is the final paper trail that the legal ownership has changed.
On the standard England rates, a £222,000 purchase sits below the £250k threshold, so the SDLT bill is usually £0. First-time buyer relief does not change that figure at this price, but a second home or buy-to-let purchase would still attract the extra 5% surcharge rules.
Both can handle residential conveyancing. A solicitor regulated by the SRA is often the better fit for more complex titles, while a licensed conveyancer regulated by the CLC is a strong choice for standard property work.
Price on request
A good fit for standard homes where you want a clear condition report before exchange
Price on request
Suits older, altered or visibly tired properties where the defects need more detail
Price on request
Compare mortgage options alongside your legal work so the purchase stays joined up
Price on request
Needed before marketing a home, with a certificate that helps buyers and agents
Price on request
Arrange moving help once exchange is near and the completion date is set
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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.