RICS-registered valuer, fixed fee, Red Book report








Shared ownership paperwork in Belfast can slow a sale, a staircase, or a remortgage before the numbers are even agreed. Our RICS-registered valuers produce a Red Book valuation that your housing association can accept, and our team turns reports around within 5 working days of inspection. Belfast flats around BT2, BT1, and BT9 often move through the process faster once the valuation sits in place, because the next step becomes a formality rather than a guessing game.
Belfast's average sold price is £193,892, which sits below our £300k pricing band, so shared-ownership valuations here start from £350. We also cover higher-value homes in Malone Road, Stranmillis, and the newer stock in BT10, BT14, and BT6, where the same Red Book format is used. Our report follows the RICS Valuation Global Standards, the framework your housing association expects, and it is written for the real admin that comes with shared ownership.

£193,892
Average sold price
-0.4%
12-month price change
3,828
Sales in the last 12 months
£317,458
Detached homes
£200,816
Semi-detached homes
£140,845
Terraced homes
£145,152
Flats
37.6%
Housing stock split, terraced
29.8%
Housing stock split, semi-detached
23.3%
Housing stock split, flats or apartments
8.2%
Housing stock split, detached
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
A shared-ownership valuation is not just for staircasing. Belfast leaseholders need one when they buy more shares, buy the final share, sell by assignment, remortgage, or look at a lease extension. Your housing association normally wants a Red Book report from a RICS-registered valuer, and the timing matters because the valuation window is short. In practical terms, a flat in The James Clow, BT1 3DR, or a house in Richmond Green, BT10 0BU, will usually need the same report format even if the next step is different.
Staircasing is the most common trigger. If you buy extra shares, the valuation gives the open-market figure that the association uses to price the slice you want, so a home in Parkside Gardens, BT14 8FP, is treated on the same valuation basis as a similar property in The Residence, BT9 5AB. Final staircasing is the point where the last share is bought and you own the property outright, with no rent left on the unsold share. Selling your share uses the assignment route, where the association often has a 4-8 week nomination period before you can market the home more widely.
Remortgaging can bring valuation checks into the picture as well, especially if you are moving from a starter share towards a larger borrowing position. Lease extensions can also need a valuation because the leasehold interest changes in value as the term shortens, and the solicitor will want the figure backed by a Red Book report. Belfast's older stock on Ormeau Road and Stranmillis can have more moving parts here, because age, condition, and lease terms all affect the instructions that follow.
Source: homedata.co.uk sold prices, Belfast, last 12 months
The valuation decides the open-market value of the whole home, not the share you already own. From there, the housing association works out the price of the extra slice. If a Belfast flat is valued at £193,892, then 10% of that figure is £19,389.20 before any lease-specific calculations, and 25% is £48,473.00. The exact amount you pay still depends on your lease wording, so the valuer's number has to be solid.
That matters in BT2, BT6, and BT9, where apartment blocks and newer estates often sit beside older terraces with very different sale histories. A shared-ownership valuation takes that into account by using comparable sold evidence, condition, floor level, outlook, lease length, and the details that shape market value on the day of inspection. We produce the Red Book report, then you use it to move the application forward with the association.

Tell us the address, the lease type, and why you need the valuation. A flat on Dublin Road, a terrace near Ormeau Road, or a house in Clarawood, BT6, all start with the same instruction form.
We agree a visit time with you or your tenant, then confirm how the valuer gets in. If the home sits in a managed block in BT1 or BT9, we coordinate around building access and any concierge rules.
Our RICS-registered valuer inspects the property, notes condition, layout, age, and anything that affects value. Older Belfast homes with red brick, slate roofs, or render finishes are checked with the local market in mind.
We write the report in line with RICS Valuation Global Standards and send it within 5 working days of inspection. The document is what your housing association wants to see, not a summary or a rough estimate.
Send the report to the housing association, solicitor, or mortgage lender, depending on the route you are taking. If the file is for a sale by assignment, the association can then start its nomination process using the correct value.
Your Red Book report is valid for 3 months from the inspection date, and housing associations in Belfast usually enforce that limit strictly. Book the valuation close to the point when your staircase, sale, or remortgage application is ready, not weeks before. That helps if you are waiting on paperwork for a BT9 flat or a terrace in BT7, because the clock starts on the day the valuer visits.
Belfast's housing stock is shaped by terraces, semis, and apartment blocks in very different parts of the city. Terraced homes make up 37.6% of the stock, semi-detached homes 29.8%, and flats or apartments 23.3%, so shared ownership often sits in the same parts of the market where flats on Dublin Road, BT2 7HB, or apartment schemes around The James Clow, BT1 3DR, are already trading. The newer house stock in Clarawood, BT6, Parkside Gardens, BT14 8FP, and Richmond Green, BT10 0BU, also feeds into the same valuation process, even though the property type is different.
Older Belfast streets bring their own checks. Red brick terraces on Ormeau Road and around Stranmillis may show damp, roof wear, or single-glazed windows, while pre-1919 stock in the Cathedral Quarter, Linen Quarter, and Queen's Quarter can sit within conservation rules that affect repair choices. The city's geology matters too. Quaternary deposits, clay, and marine clays can leave some parts with moderate to high shrink-swell potential, and the River Lagan, Belfast Lough, the Blackstaff River, and the River Farset all add flood considerations in lower-lying areas.
The market gap also explains why shared ownership still has a place here. Detached homes average £317,458, while flats average £145,152 and terraced homes £140,845, so buying a share can be the route that gets a buyer into the city before they move to full ownership. Belfast's population of 345,418 and 149,000 households means there is plenty of movement across BT1, BT2, BT4, BT6, BT9, BT10, BT14, and beyond, but the paperwork still needs to be handled in the right order.
A Red Book valuation is not a casual estimate. It sets out the open-market value, which is the price a willing buyer would pay in normal market conditions for the whole home, not the share you already own. In Belfast, the valuer may use comparables from streets such as Ormeau Road, Stranmillis, Dublin Road, or Malone Road, because those sales help anchor the number to real evidence rather than guesswork.
Can you challenge the figure? Usually not, unless there is a clear factual issue, such as missed accommodation, a major condition change, or a point the valuer could not inspect first time. If a roof leak worsens, a flood event affects a BT1 apartment block, or building works change the layout after the visit, a re-inspection may be sensible. The report has to reflect the property on the inspection date, and that is why the 3-month validity period matters so much.

The report is valid for 3 months from the inspection date. Belfast housing associations usually apply that rule strictly, so if your staircasing paperwork for BT6 or BT9 is not ready, it is better to wait before booking.
Staircasing, final staircasing, assignment when you sell your share, remortgaging, and lease extensions can all trigger the need for a Red Book report. A flat in BT2 or a terrace in BT7 may follow the same valuation route even though the legal step is different.
In most cases, the leaseholder pays. That is true for staircasing, remortgaging, and final staircasing, while a seller usually pays when the valuation is needed for an assignment in Belfast.
We turn the Red Book report around within 5 working days of inspection. The inspection itself is usually straightforward, but older Belfast homes in Ormeau Road, Stranmillis, or BT14 can take a little longer on site if the layout is more complex.
You can ask for a review if something factual has changed or if a key point was missed, such as a room, an extension, or a condition issue. You usually cannot dispute it just because the number is higher than you wanted, because the report has to follow the evidence available on the day.
Some associations want a RICS-registered valuer they already accept, so it is best to check before you instruct. If they want a different firm, we can usually advise on the wording they need, and the Belfast address still gets the same Red Book treatment.
New Model shared ownership schemes, usually those from 2021 onwards, can allow 1% staircasing each year. Older schemes in Belfast more often ask for 10% minimum steps, so a flat in BT1 may have a very different lease rule from a newer house in BT6.
Final staircasing means you buy the last share and own 100% of the property. Once that happens, there is no rent on the unsold share, although service charges and any lease obligations can still remain in place.
Price on request
Legal support for staircasing, final staircasing, and buying the last share.
Price on request
Legal help for selling your shared-ownership share by assignment.
Price on request
Speak to lenders about staircasing, remortgaging, or moving to full ownership.
Price on request
A useful check for older terraces, apartments, and houses across Belfast before you buy more shares.
Price on request
Removals for a move after assignment, staircasing, or final staircasing.
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RICS-registered valuer, fixed fee, Red Book report
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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.