RICS-qualified surveyors, detailed property reports








Stroud's older homes need a careful eye. Around the town centre, the canal and the River Frome, many properties were built long before modern detailing became standard. Our surveyors carry out detailed building inspections across Stroud, from honey-coloured Cotswold stone terraces to later red-brick houses and rendered homes.
A building survey shows how a property is holding together. We look for movement, damp, roof wear, timber decay and repairs that may be hidden behind plaster or paint. That matters on a market where homedata.co.uk records an average Stroud house price of £356,533 in May 2024 and 494 sales in the previous 12 months, so buyers need a clear view before they commit.

£356,533
Average House Price
£549,493
Detached Average
£345,671
Semi-detached Average
£290,094
Terraced Average
£194,000
Flats Average
494
12-Month Sales
-0.36%
Overall Price Change
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Inside a building survey, we inspect the visible fabric from ridge tile to boundary wall. Roof coverings, chimneys, flashings, rainwater goods, walls, floors, windows, external joinery, damp proofing, drainage and signs of structural movement all get checked in detail. On a Cotswold stone house in Stroud or a later home in Stonehouse, that level of inspection often exposes problems that a lighter report misses.
We do not lift floorboards or open walls unless access is already there, but the report still goes far deeper than a mortgage valuation. It flags defects by condition rating and explains where repairs may be urgent, where upkeep is sensible, and where a specialist needs to look next. That is useful on older plots near the River Frome, where water management and drainage can affect the whole building.

Terraced streets in Stroud account for 28.1% of the district's housing stock, with 31.9% semi-detached, 29.8% detached and 9.6% flats, maisonettes or apartments. That mix matters because each construction type behaves differently, from solid-walled Cotswold stone homes to later cavity-wall houses and post-war estates. Our surveyors often see the sharpest differences between pre-1919 properties in the historic core and homes built after 1945 on the valley slopes.
The geology across the Five Valleys is just as important. Lias Clay and Fuller's Earth Clay bring a moderate to high shrink-swell risk in some parts of Stroud, especially where clay sits close to the surface or trees are close to the building. Minor cracking can be a maintenance issue, yet the same pattern can also point to movement, so a full building survey is the safer route on homes in areas such as Highfields, the town centre or the lanes toward Nailsworth.
Flood risk also plays a part. The River Frome runs through Stroud, and surface water can build up when steep-sided valleys shed heavy rainfall faster than drains can take it. Traditional Cotswold stone walls, lime mortar and older drainage runs need a surveyor who knows how those materials age, because patch repairs can hide a bigger pattern of decay.
Damp and movement are the two findings we meet most often in Stroud. Older homes with solid walls can trap moisture, while slipped tiles, tired leadwork and failed mortar let rain work into lofts and ceilings. Along the Five Valleys, clay movement can add cracking and sticking doors to the list, so we check the pattern rather than treating every crack as the same.
Around the River Frome and the steeper parts of the district, drainage can be part of the story as well. We often find condensation from poor ventilation, timber decay in damp roof spaces, outdated electrics and plumbing that has reached the end of its useful life. The Steppes in Nailsworth, Littlecombe in Dursley, Highfields in Stroud and The Maples in Stonehouse all sit in an area where local building form and ground conditions can produce different defects from one plot to the next.

Choose a building survey and send us the property details. We confirm the address, the type of home and any concerns that matter, then arrange the inspection with a surveyor who knows the Stroud area.
We match the job with a RICS surveyor experienced in older stone, brick and rendered homes. That matters in Stroud, where a cottage near the canal can behave very differently from a post-war house on the edge of the district.
The inspection usually takes 3-4 hours, depending on size and access. We check the roof, loft where accessible, walls, windows, floors, damp, timber, drainage and visible signs of movement.
After the visit, we review the evidence, write the report and add practical advice. We explain the condition of the property in plain English and highlight urgent defects, repair priorities and areas that may need specialist input.
Your report is usually delivered in 5-10 working days. The final document includes condition ratings, repair notes and guidance on what to do next, which is useful before exchange or during price talks.
If the report shows movement, damp, roofing defects or heritage repair issues, we can talk through the findings. Buyers in Stroud often use that call to decide whether to renegotiate, obtain specialist quotes or move ahead with confidence.
A good report does more than list defects. We separate matters into condition ratings, explain what they mean in plain English, and point out whether a problem is urgent or simply needs monitoring. On a Stroud purchase, that might mean a cracked gable wall near the town centre, decayed timber on a cottage in Nailsworth or loose ridge tiles on a house in Stonehouse.
Condition rating 3 items need the closest attention, while lower-rated defects may still deserve budgeting and routine maintenance. If the report highlights subsidence, structural movement, damp near the River Frome or mortar decay on a listed Cotswold stone facade, we may suggest a structural engineer, damp specialist or drainage contractor next. That extra step helps when an offer needs revisiting or when a buyer wants a clearer repair plan.
Negotiation often starts with facts. A full building survey can identify work that a seller may not have allowed for, from roof replacement to re-pointing, and the report gives a stronger basis for asking for a price adjustment or for repairs to be completed before exchange. Our building survey team also helps buyers separate cosmetic wear from structural concern, which matters when a property has already had patch repairs in the town centre or in one of the district's listed villages.
Pre-1919 houses are the clearest case for a full building survey in Stroud. The district has a strong historic core, numerous conservation areas and many listed buildings, so a careful inspection is usually the sensible choice before commitment. Cotswold stone walls, lime mortar, old slate roofs and timber roofs can all hide defects that only show up in a detailed report.
Even newer homes deserve thought. home.co.uk currently lists The Steppes in Nailsworth, GL6 0JH, from £475,000, Littlecombe in Dursley, GL11 4BA, from £265,000, Highfields in Stroud, GL5 2HX, from £399,995 and The Maples in Stonehouse, GL10 2NG, from £369,995. On those sites, a building survey may sit alongside snagging if there are alterations, retaining walls, visible cracking or unusual drainage details, because new workmanship does not always tell the whole story.

A full building survey looks at the visible structure and fabric of the property in depth. Our surveyors assess roof coverings, chimneys, walls, floors, windows, drainage, damp, timber and signs of movement, then explain the findings in a report. In Stroud, that matters because Cotswold stone, red brick and rendered homes each show defects in different ways.
A mortgage valuation is for the lender's security, not a buyer's condition review. It may confirm that a house in Stroud is worth lending against, yet it can miss damp, roof wear, timber decay and ground movement. A building survey is much more detailed and is the better choice for older homes in the town centre or on clay soil near the valley sides.
The site inspection usually takes 3-4 hours, depending on size and access. A large detached house in Stroud or an older converted mill may take longer than a flat in the district. We then write and check the report, with delivery typically in 5-10 working days.
A building survey in Stroud starts from £400, but the final fee depends on size, age and access. A typical RICS Level 2 survey for a 2-bedroom flat may start around £350-£500, while a 3-bedroom house can be about £450-£700+. Older cottages near the canal or larger homes in Highfields often need more time, so the fee rises with the work involved.
Yes. If we identify roof defects, damp, movement or worn-out services, the report gives you a clear record of the work that needs doing. Buyers in Stroud often use those findings to ask for a price reduction or to request repairs before exchange. That is especially useful on older homes where hidden maintenance costs can build up quickly.
A full building survey is less common on a brand-new house, but it can still help if the property has unusual construction, visible movement or a messy finish. On sites such as Highfields, The Steppes or The Maples, buyers sometimes prefer a snagging-style check first, then a fuller survey if something does not look right. For a newly completed home, we usually discuss the risk profile before suggesting the right report.
Yes, and Stroud has plenty of both. A listed cottage or a house within one of the town's conservation areas often needs a building survey because traditional materials behave differently and repairs can be costly if they are done badly. We can also flag where a specialist in lime mortar, stone repair or heritage joinery should be brought in.
From £350
HomeBuyer report for conventional homes in reasonable condition
From £400
Full building survey for older, larger or altered properties
Price on request
Energy rating for a sale or rental property
Price on request
Legal work after an offer is accepted
Survey fees in Stroud usually start from £400 for a building survey. The final figure depends on the age, size and shape of the property, plus how much of the building can be inspected safely. A 3-bedroom house often sits around £450 to £700+ for a Level 2 survey, while a 2-bedroom flat may start around £350 to £500.
Older stone cottages in the town centre, large detached houses in the district and homes with loft conversions or basement spaces need more time, so the fee rises with complexity. That is true on pre-1919 properties in the historic core and on newer homes with retaining walls or unusual drainage, such as plots in Highfields or Stonehouse. The extra detail is what buyers pay for, because a short inspection can miss the problems that matter later.
We usually send the report in 5-10 working days after the site visit. If the findings point to movement, damp, roof failure or a material repair bill, the report gives a clearer basis for revisiting an offer before exchange. On a market where homedata.co.uk records an average Stroud house price of £356,533 and home.co.uk lists new-build homes from £265,000 to £475,000 in the wider district, the inspection fee is a small part of the total spend.
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RICS-qualified surveyors, detailed property reports
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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.