Red Book reports for staircasing, sale, remortgage and lease work.








Our RICS-registered valuers produce a Red Book valuation accepted by housing associations across Winchester, from SO22 to SO23. We work on a fixed fee and turn reports around within 5 working days of inspection, so you are not left waiting while the paperwork piles up. Pricing starts from £350 for properties under £300,000, from £425 at £300,000 to £500,000, from £495 at £500,000 to £750,000, and from £595 above £750,000.
Winchester values move in tight bands, and that matters on shared ownership. homedata.co.uk records show an average sold price of £471,000, while home.co.uk lists an average asking price of £626,810, so the figure in your valuation can change the cost of a staircasing step by a meaningful amount. If your home sits near Kings Barton at The Green in SO22 6UH, Dell Road in SO23 0QB, or Parchment Street in the historic core, we produce a report that is set out for the association, the solicitor, and the lender.

£471,000
Average sold price
£626,810
Average asking price
£757,000
Detached sold price
£478,000
Semi-detached sold price
£399,000
Terraced sold price
£234,000
Flats and maisonettes sold price
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
A shared-ownership lease in Winchester moves in stages, and each stage needs the right figure. Staircasing, final staircasing, selling your share by assignment, re-mortgaging, and lease extension all trigger a Red Book valuation because the housing association wants a current open market value, not an old purchase price from years ago in SO22 or SO23. That applies just as much to a flat near Jewry Street as it does to a house off Chilbolton Avenue.
The local market is split into clear pockets. A terrace in SO23 0QB, a semi on Dell Road, and a flat closer to The Close can sit in different price bands, so the valuer needs good comparables from the same part of Winchester rather than a broad county average. home.co.uk listings on Kings Barton at The Green in SO22 6UH show homes from £250,000 to £695,000, while Petersfield Road in SO23 0JD carries a guide price of £899,995, which is exactly why housing associations want a fresh figure before they approve a buyout or sale.
The admin is usually more awkward than the valuation itself. Your lease may call for a report within a tight window, a named RICS-registered valuer, and wording that matches the association pack, then your solicitor has to line that up with the staircasing form or sale notice. We keep the process practical, because nobody wants to chase the same document twice while a deadline sits over a flat in the historic core or a house near Romsey Road.
Standard shared-ownership checks can vary by lease, but most associations look for a Red Book report from a RICS-registered valuer and a current inspection date.
Staircasing is priced from the open market value, not from what you paid when the lease was first assigned. If a Winchester flat is valued at £234,000, then buying an extra 10% share is based on £23,400 for that slice, before legal fees, rent changes, or any lender costs are added. The same rule applies whether the property is a flat in SO23, a semi in SO22, or a new build at Kings Barton.
The numbers make the point clearly. On a market value of £471,000, a 25% share works out at £117,750, and 1% on a new model shared ownership home would be £4,710. That is why the valuer’s figure matters so much on a staircase in Winchester, because a small shift in the open market value can change the amount you need to pay over to the housing association.

Start with the reason for the valuation. Staircasing, assignment, remortgage, lease extension, or final staircasing all need slightly different paperwork, and we match the report to the job from the first call.
We work around the practical bits. If the home is in SO23, a managing agent, tenant, or key holder may need to open the door, and we can coordinate that before the inspection date is set.
Our RICS valuer checks the home, the layout, the condition, and any features that affect market value. A flat near The Close will be judged differently from a house off Petersfield Road, because the comparables are not the same.
The report follows RICS Valuation Global Standards and is written for housing association use. It sets out the market evidence, the valuation basis, and the final figure in a format that is easy to submit.
Once the report is ready, you pass it to your association, solicitor, or lender. If the 3-month validity window is close to running out, we can talk through whether a new inspection is the better move.
The valuation is valid for 3 months from the inspection date, and housing associations tend to enforce that strictly. If you are staircasing a flat in SO22 or selling a share in SO23, time the instruction to the point when your application pack is nearly ready. An early report can expire before the last form is signed.
Winchester is a patchwork of different property types, and the valuation needs to reflect that. A new home at Kings Barton at The Green in SO22 6UH sits in a different bracket from a flat near High Street or a semi on Old Hillside Road, even though both are within the same town boundary. homedata.co.uk shows a £471,000 average sold price, while home.co.uk lists a £626,810 average asking price, so the gap between sold evidence and asking evidence is wide enough to affect a staircase quote.
The historic parts of Winchester carry their own rules. The Close, College Street, Peninsular Barracks, High Street, Jewry Street, Parchment Street, and St Cross all sit within an area with heavy heritage controls, and that affects alterations, windows, and external finishes. A leaseholder in one of those streets may need a valuers’ note that pays attention to condition and consent history, not just the postcode.
Flood and ground conditions also matter when the valuer is assessing evidence around the district. The River Itchen corridor, Winnall Moors, and parts of the wider Winchester area have flood management in place, while the district’s chalk and clay layers can change how buyers read risk. That does not replace a survey, but it does influence the way the market prices a home in SO21, SO22, or SO23.
The phrase open market value means the price a willing buyer would pay on the open market, with no special discount for shared ownership. Our valuer uses local comparable evidence, often from Winchester streets and schemes such as SO22 6UH, SO23 0QB, and SO21 2AD, then adjusts for size, condition, layout, and any visible issues. That is why a number from one flat cannot be copied onto another without checking the details.
Can the figure be challenged? Sometimes, but not often. If the condition on inspection day was unusual, or if the valuer missed a material feature, a re-inspection may be the right next step, especially on a property that has changed since the last time it was marketed. A valuation should be treated as a market opinion with evidence behind it, not as a rough estimate from a quick online tool.

The report is valid for 3 months from the inspection date. Housing associations tend to treat that date strictly, so a valuation done for a house in SO22 may be too old by the time your staircase pack is ready to send. It is better to book it close to the point where your solicitor or association says the paperwork is nearly complete.
Staircasing, final staircasing, selling your share, re-mortgaging, and lease extension all trigger one. A flat near Parchment Street and a new build at Kings Barton at The Green can both need the same kind of report, because the trigger is the transaction, not the age or style of the property.
In most Winchester cases, the leaseholder or seller pays. If you are staircasing a property in SO23, or selling by assignment after the nomination period, the cost normally sits with you, not the housing association. Where a lender asks for a fresh report, the borrower usually pays that bill.
Our Red Book report is turned around within 5 working days of inspection. The inspection itself is usually quick, but access can slow things down if a managing agent, tenant, or key holder needs to open a flat near Jewry Street or a home off Chilbolton Avenue.
You can ask for a re-inspection if something material changed, or if the first visit missed an important feature. A valuer will not usually move the figure just because a homeowner in SO22 disagrees, but they may review it if there is better comparable evidence or if the property condition was not properly seen on the day.
Some associations have panel rules or wording preferences. If that happens, we look at the lease and the association instructions before you proceed, which helps avoid delay on homes around SO22, SO23, or the city centre streets.
On new model shared ownership homes, yes, 1% a year is possible. Older Winchester schemes usually still ask for 10% minimum staircasing blocks, so a lease in a flat off Parchment Street may follow the older route rather than the newer one.
Final staircasing buys the last share and takes the property to 100% ownership. After completion, the rent on the unsold share stops, so the homeowner no longer pays shared-ownership rent on that home in Winchester.
Yes, if the change is visible and material. A new kitchen, water damage, a roof issue, or unfinished repair work in a flat near The Close or a house in SO23 can alter the market view and may justify a fresh inspection.
Yes, we can provide the Red Book valuation needed for an assignment sale, and we can point you towards the right conveyancing route as well. That matters where the nomination period is still running and the housing association needs a current figure before the home can be marketed more widely.
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Solicitor support for staircasing, transfer paperwork and leasehold purchase steps.
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Help with selling your share, nomination periods and the contract pack.
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Support if your lender wants a fresh borrowing check before remortgaging.
From £395
A practical survey option for homes where you want a closer look at condition after valuation.
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Removal support for completions, staircasing moves and shared-ownership sales.
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Red Book reports for staircasing, sale, remortgage and lease work.
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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.