For older, listed, extended and unusual homes








Ilkeston still carries a lot of older housing around the Market Place, Station Street and Digby Street, and that matters when you are choosing a survey. Red brick terraces, listed civic buildings, conservation-area stock and homes on the River Erewash floodplain can all hide issues that a quick viewing will miss. That is why many buyers choose our RICS Level 3 Building Survey when the property looks old, altered or hard to read.
Our RICS-qualified building surveyors inspect the loft, roof space, sub-floor areas, walls, visible services and the main structure, then set out what needs attention first. That suits homes in Ilkeston East and Ilkeston South, where semi-detached and terraced stock dominates, and it also suits listed buildings such as St Mary's Church, the Town Hall, Ilkeston Library and the Scala Cinema. If you are buying a place near Station Street, Furnace Road or Wentworth Street, a Level 3 survey gives you the detail needed to judge repair risk before you commit.

9,737 residents
Town population
4,577 households
Households
29 in Ilkeston and the surrounding area
Listed buildings
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
A Level 3 survey is the most detailed RICS home survey we provide. Our surveyor carries out a visual inspection of all accessible parts, then comments on the construction, the visible materials, the condition of the fabric and the defects that can be seen without opening anything up. In Ilkeston, that can matter on red-brick houses around Market Place, on altered terraces close to Station Street, and on older properties that have picked up extensions, patch repairs or changed rooflines over the years. The report does not just list faults. It explains why they matter, what the repair might involve, and what can happen if you leave them alone.
We look at the roof coverings, chimneys, flashings, walls, floors, loft structure, visible timber, drainage routes that can be seen from the surface, and the parts of the sub-floor that are safely accessible. On a property near Ilkeston School, for example, a survey might pick up cracking, worn pointing, damp staining or signs of poor past repair before those defects become expensive. A good Level 3 report also sets priorities. It separates urgent items from routine maintenance so you can see where the real risk sits.
What it does not do is just as important. A Level 3 survey is not destructive, so we do not lift carpets, drill into finishes, open up walls or carry out intrusive checks. We do not carry out CCTV drainage surveys, gas tests or electrical testing as part of the inspection, and we do not turn it into a structural engineer’s report. If movement, severe cracking or distortion is visible, our surveyor will recommend a specialist follow-up, usually a structural engineer, so you can get a separate opinion before exchange.
Source: Homemove Level 3 pricing tiers, May 2026
A Level 3 survey fits homes that are older than around 100 years, listed, heavily extended or built in an unusual way. In Ilkeston, that often means a terrace near the Market Place, a converted property close to the Town Hall, or a house that has been altered so many times the original construction is hard to read. If you can already see cracking, roof wear, damp or odd patching on the viewing, a lighter survey may not give enough detail.
It also suits buyers who plan to extend, remodel or strip out rooms once they own the property. That matters in streets such as Digby Street, Wentworth Street and the eastern end of Station Street, where the house may look straightforward from the road but tell a different story once the surveyor checks the loft and the accessible timber. Older brickwork, odd roof junctions and patch repairs are the sort of thing that justify paying for the extra depth.

Start with the property address, type and asking price, then we match the survey to the home. A terrace off Station Street, a semi in Ilkeston South, or a listed building near the Market Place can all fall into different pricing bands.
Once you are happy with the quote, you instruct the survey and we confirm the brief. At this point we can note special concerns, such as cracking, damp patches or a history of alterations.
The seller or agent then makes site access available. We normally want loft access, the main rooms, the outside elevations and any reachable sub-floor or roof-space areas.
The surveyor attends the property and the inspection usually takes a full day for a more complex home. Older roofs, long terraces and houses with extensions in Ilkeston often take longer than a standard modern flat.
Your report is usually delivered within 7 to 10 working days, and it is often 20 to 60 pages long. You get the headline risks, the repair priorities and the follow-up actions, so you can move quickly if the findings affect the deal.
Ask the surveyor to phone you after the inspection, but before the written report arrives. That call gives you the headline issues straight away, which is useful if the property on Station Street has cracking, the roof on a terrace near Digby Street looks tired, or the loft timbers on a house near the Market Place need a closer look. The written report then follows with the detail.
Ilkeston has a clear town-centre pattern. The Market Place is enclosed by traditional historic and civic buildings, many of them in red brick, and some important buildings such as Ilkeston School use brick with sandstone dressings. That mix matters to a surveyor because old brick, rendered surfaces and earlier repairs age differently. A Level 3 survey checks whether mortar joints, roof junctions and wall finishes are holding together properly, rather than relying on a quick visual glance from the pavement.
The ground beneath the town also shapes the risk profile. Ilkeston and the surrounding villages sit on the southern tip of the Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Yorkshire Coalfield, and parts of the River Erewash floodplain contain alluvium made up of clay, silt, sand and gravel. Local knowledge points to clay soil that shifts as a real quirk in Ilkeston, which is why cracking and movement need careful reading rather than a casual shrug. Flood risk is also real, with Station Street, Furnace Road, Wentworth Street, Middleton Street and Digby Street all mentioned in flood mapping and historic flood records.
Timber and roof defects show up too. Surveyors in the area have flagged sagging ridge beams in post-war terraces, and older properties can show dry rot, wet rot or woodworm, especially where repairs have been patched rather than properly rebuilt. Radon potential is generally in the second lowest band across much of Ilkeston, with 1-3% of residential properties above the Action Level, but that does not remove the need to check ventilation, floors and damp control. The same goes for asbestos in some older materials. We look carefully, because the wrong call on one of those issues can change the real cost of a purchase.
A Level 3 report is often the start of the next step, not the end of the process. If our surveyor sees movement, serious cracking or distortion, we will usually recommend a structural engineer. If damp reads as more than a surface stain, a damp specialist may be the right follow-up. If the wiring, boiler or drainage raise concerns, you may need an electrician, a gas engineer or a drainage CCTV survey.
That follow-up work can be used in the purchase discussion. A report that shows roof renewal, timber decay or flood-related repair on a house near Wentworth Street or Furnace Road gives you a stronger basis for renegotiation, or for asking the seller to deal with the issue before exchange. It can also help you decide whether to proceed at all, which is often the real value of a detailed survey.

A Level 2 survey gives a shorter condition summary, which suits newer and more straightforward homes. A Level 3 survey goes deeper, with fuller commentary on construction, visible defects, repair options and maintenance priorities. In a town like Ilkeston, where the stock around the Market Place, Station Street and Digby Street includes older and altered homes, the extra detail can be the better fit.
Not every older house needs one, but many do. If the property is pre-1920s, listed, extended, heavily altered or already showing signs of cracking, damp or roof wear, Level 3 is usually the safer instruction. That applies to homes in conservation areas and to properties near the River Erewash floodplain as well.
Our Level 3 reports are typically delivered within 7 to 10 working days after the inspection. The inspection itself can take a full day on a more complex property, especially where the house has extensions, a hard-to-read roof or awkward access into loft and sub-floor spaces. That extra time is part of why the report carries more detail.
Cost depends on the property's value, size, age, condition and the amount of detail needed. Our standard Level 3 pricing starts from £650 for homes under £300k, then rises through the higher value bands. Bigger homes, listed buildings and properties with unusual construction can cost more because they take longer to inspect properly.
Movement, structural cracking, timber decay, damp that looks persistent, roof spread, a poor chimney stack or visible distortion will often trigger a specialist recommendation. In Ilkeston, that can also include flood-related concerns on streets such as Station Street or Furnace Road, where the issue may need a more targeted inspection. A Level 3 survey identifies the concern, then points you towards the right specialist.
Yes, they often can. If the report shows roof replacement, defective pointing, subsidence risk or another item that will cost real money, you can use that information in the purchase discussion. Buyers sometimes ask for a price reduction, a repair allowance or a seller remedy before exchange.
Included is a detailed visual inspection of all accessible parts, with comments on materials, visible defects, repairs and maintenance priorities. Excluded are destructive checks, lifting of carpets, opening up of fabric, drainage CCTV and testing of services. If something needs that deeper investigation, the report will point you to the next step.
No, lenders usually do not require a Level 3 survey. A mortgage valuation is not the same thing, and it does not give you useful defect advice in the way a survey does. Many Ilkeston buyers choose Level 3 because the property makes them uneasy, not because the lender asks for it.
From £450
For newer, conventional homes across Ilkeston East and Ilkeston South
From £75
Book an EPC for sale or letting paperwork
From £1,050
Support with purchase paperwork and completion
From £0
Compare mortgage routes for your purchase
From £350
Follow up movement, cracking or subsidence concerns
From £250
Check roof coverings and valleys without scaffolding
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For older, listed, extended and unusual homes
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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.