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RICS Level 3 Surveys

RICS Level 3 Building Survey in Irvine

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A thorough survey for Irvine buyers

Irvine mixes coastal exposure, clay ground and a wide spread of property types, so a basic check is not always enough. Our RICS-qualified building surveyors inspect the loft, sub-floor, roof coverings, walls, visible services and structure, then set out what is urgent, what can wait, and what needs specialist follow-up. That matters on streets such as Fullarton Street, Lochlibo Road and around Montgomerie Park, where a buyer may be weighing up a newer timber-frame home against an older house with previous alteration work.

The local market gives a clear reason to go deeper. homedata.co.uk records show Irvine’s average sold house price at £156,178, with the average price for a property over the last year at £161,110. home.co.uk currently shows 158 homes for sale in Irvine, while the average asking price for a 4-bedroom detached house is about £325,697. If you are buying in KA11 or KA12, or looking at a house near Irvine Harbour or the River Garnock, a Level 3 report can flag movement, damp, roof wear and repair priorities before you commit.

RICS Level 3 Building Survey in IRVINE

Irvine Property Snapshot

£161,110

Average House Price

£156,178

Average Sold Price

£283,396

Detached Homes

£114,016

Terraced Homes

158

Homes for Sale

£325,697

4-Bed Detached Asking Price

Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk

What a RICS Level 3 Survey Covers

Our RICS Level 3 survey is the most detailed residential inspection we provide. The surveyor carries out a visual inspection of all accessible parts, then comments on construction, materials, defects, and the likely condition of the property over time. In Irvine, that can mean a closer look at an altered terrace in KA12, a detached house near Lochlibo Road, or a coastal property where weathering around the roof and masonry deserves more attention than a standard report would give.

The report explains what repairs are needed, which items need routine maintenance, and which issues could worsen if left alone. If we see cracking at window heads, signs of timber decay, failed roof coverings or damp staining around a chimney stack, the report will say what that means in practical terms. It is not a box-ticking exercise. The point is to show how a defect affects the building, the likely consequence of doing nothing, and whether another specialist should be brought in next.

A Level 3 survey does not include destructive investigation. We do not lift carpets, open up floors, remove plaster, or carry out drainage CCTV or service testing. Those are separate follow-ups, often needed if the surveyor spots movement, hidden moisture, suspect roof spread or an electrical installation that needs checking by the right trade. On a house near the River Garnock or a converted property off Fullarton Street, that distinction matters because the visible issue may only be the start of the story.

For buyers in Irvine, the detail can be the difference between a manageable repair plan and a nasty surprise after completion. Our reports help you understand whether a cracked render patch is cosmetic, whether a sloping floor needs more investigation, or whether a roof edge has reached the point where short-term patching is poor value. The language is direct. No padding. Just the facts a buyer needs before exchange.

  • Loft space and roof structure
  • External walls and visible masonry cracks
  • Floors, ceilings and signs of movement
  • Damp, decay and ventilation issues
  • Visible plumbing, heating and electrical concerns

Typical Level 3 Pricing by Property Value

Under £300k £650
£300k to £500k £800
£500k to £750k £950
£750k to £1M £1,100
Over £1M £1,300

Homemove pricing tiers, based on property value and survey complexity.

When You Need Level 3 Not Level 2

A Level 3 survey is the better fit when the property has age, alteration or unusual construction on its side. That includes pre-1920s homes, listed buildings, older stone or timber-framed houses, and properties that have been extended or remodelled in stages. In Irvine, that can apply to a house in KA11 with signs of previous structural work, or a property near Fullarton Street where later additions may hide junction problems between old and new fabric.

The same applies where visible defects are already on show. Cracking around a bay, signs of settlement at the rear elevation, a tired flat roof, or damp on the inside of an external wall all justify the deeper inspection. Buyers looking at a home they plan to alter also tend to choose Level 3, because the report gives a fuller read on materials, construction and likely repair costs before builders are brought in.

When You Need Level 3 Not Level 2

Booking Your Level 3 Survey

1

Get a quote

Tell us the property type, value and postcode, then we match the survey to the house. A terrace in KA12 and a detached home off Lochlibo Road will not need the same level of attention.

2

Instruct the survey

Once you are happy with the price, we confirm the booking and line up the inspection. You can use your conveyancer at the same time, but the survey remains separate from legal work.

3

Arrange access

We coordinate with the seller, agent or occupier so the surveyor can reach the loft, boiler cupboard, cellar if present, and any other accessible spaces. That is where the useful detail often sits.

4

Inspect the property

The inspection usually takes a full day for a Level 3 survey, especially on a larger detached house or a home with later extensions. Our surveyors work methodically, outside first and then inside.

5

Receive the report

The report usually arrives within 7-10 working days and is often 20-60 pages long. You get a clear written record of defects, repair advice and recommended next steps.

Ask for a call after the inspection

Ask the surveyor to phone you after the site visit and before the report lands in your inbox. If the house is on Fullarton Street, near Irvine Harbour, or tucked into KA11 where ground movement is a concern, that quick call can give you the headline issues while the inspection is still fresh in mind. The report then follows with the detail.

Local Construction and Defect Patterns in Irvine

Irvine’s ground conditions are a real reason to read a survey carefully. Irvine sits on clay soil that shrinks and swells as moisture levels change, and that movement is one of the main causes of subsidence locally. We also see the same pattern where leaking drainage, mature tree roots or old mine workings have weakened the ground. If a property shows cracking, a sticking front door, or sloping floors, the surveyor will not guess. They will explain what has been seen, and whether a structural engineer should look next.

Flood and coastal issues need attention too. The River Irvine meets the Firth of Clyde here, and North Ayrshire flood warning areas include Irvine Waterside/Low Green and River Garnock. Local screening work has also pointed to possible flooding around Wharf Road and Garnock Road by 2040, although that study is only a screening tool, not a certainty. Near Irvine Beach and Irvine Harbour, shoreline erosion has already exposed buried gabion baskets in places, so homes that face the coast or sit low to the ground deserve careful inspection of render, masonry, junctions and damp levels.

Building method also matters. Irvine now has a major timber-frame presence, with Alexander Timber Design opening its Irvine facility in 2025 and supplying builders across Scotland. That modern stock can perform well, but it still needs proper detailing at openings, roof junctions and service penetrations. Older Scottish buildings in the area may hide earth, lime, timber, straw and stone behind later render or cement coatings, so a surveyor has to read the fabric, not just the face of the wall. In a house off Montgomerie Park or an older property near KA12, hidden repairs can change the whole buying decision.

The local market shows a split too. homedata.co.uk records average prices around £172,000 in KA11 and around £135,000 in KA12, both steady year on year. That gap often reflects age, stock type and condition rather than simple location. A Level 3 survey is useful because it sets the defect picture against the asking price and the likely repair bill, which is often what a buyer needs before choosing whether to continue, renegotiate or step back.

  • Shrink-swell clay ground
  • Coastal erosion near Irvine Harbour
  • Flood screening for Irvine Waterside/Low Green
  • River Garnock flood risk
  • Possible legacy mine workings

Following Up on Findings

A good Level 3 report should point you towards the right specialist, not leave you guessing. If the surveyor sees movement in a wall on a property near Garnock Road, they may recommend a structural engineer. If the report finds damp around a chimney breast or a cold bridge at a bay window, a damp specialist may be needed. If the boiler, wiring or gas fittings raise concern, the next call may be to an electrician or gas engineer.

The report can also help with price talks. On a house in KA11 with roof renewal due, or a terrace off Fullarton Street with cracked render and poor ventilation, the findings may justify a renegotiation or a request for the seller to complete repairs before completion. Where the issue is unclear, the report can support a condition in the sale contract, or at least give your conveyancer a firm basis for questions. That is where the detail pays off.

Following Up on Findings

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between a Level 2 and a Level 3 survey?

A Level 2 survey suits a standard property in reasonable condition. A Level 3 goes deeper, with fuller comment on construction, defects, repair options and what may happen if repairs are left undone. In Irvine, that extra depth is often useful for older houses, altered homes and properties near the coast or the River Garnock.

When should I choose Level 3 in Irvine?

Choose Level 3 if the property is older than about 100 years, listed, heavily altered, unusual in construction, or already showing defects. That could include a stone house in KA11, a modified home near Fullarton Street, or a property with cracking, damp or roof wear visible on a first viewing.

How long does a Level 3 survey take to turn around?

Our reports are usually delivered within 7-10 working days after inspection. Larger homes, properties with extensions, or houses with more complex defects in KA12 may need the full time because the surveyor is writing a detailed report rather than a short summary.

How much does a Level 3 survey cost in Irvine?

Homemove Level 3 pricing starts from £650 for homes under £300k, then rises with property value. A larger detached home, such as one of the pricier houses seen around the Irvine market, may sit in the £800, £950, £1,100 or £1,300 bands depending on value.

What kind of defects trigger a specialist follow-up?

Movement, serious cracking, damp that looks active, roof spread, timber decay, unsafe electrics, gas concerns or drainage problems will usually trigger a recommendation for a specialist. In Irvine, clay movement, coastal weathering and flooding around the River Garnock can all lead to that kind of next step.

Can I use the survey to renegotiate the price?

Yes. If the report identifies repair work that was not obvious in the viewing, you can ask for a price reduction or ask the seller to fix specific issues before completion. That often happens where roof work, damp treatment or structural checks are needed on a property near Irvine Harbour or Fullarton Street.

What is included in a Level 3 survey, and what is excluded?

It includes a visual inspection of all accessible parts, with detailed comment on condition, construction and defects. It does not include destructive opening-up, lifting carpets, drainage CCTV, or testing of services, so those checks may need separate instructions if the survey raises concern.

Do mortgage lenders require a Level 3 survey?

No. Lenders do not require one as a rule, and the mortgage valuation is not a survey. The valuation is for the lender’s lending decision, not your buying decision, so a Level 3 can still be the sensible choice even when no lender asks for it.

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