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Property check Birmingham: 12 things to check before buying

Buyers in Birmingham can pull together a complete pre-offer due-diligence picture in roughly 30 minutes using free public data and one or two paid layers. This page walks through the 12 checks in order: what each one is, where the data comes from, and what to do with the result.

Last updated: 6 May 2026. Editorially reviewed: 20 May 2026.

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Why these checks matter in Birmingham

Birmingham sits on a sandstone plateau at the watershed between the Severn and Trent basins, so the city has fewer large rivers than Manchester or London. The Tame, Cole and Rea are the main watercourses, and the Birmingham canal network sits below street level. River flood risk is concentrated in lower-lying corridors; surface water is the dominant flood mode.

Birmingham bedrock is Mercia Mudstone Group across most of the city, a fine-grained sedimentary mudstone overlain in places by glacial till and river-terrace deposits. Mercia Mudstone weathers to a clay-rich soil that has moderate shrink-swell potential.

Different cities have different headline risks. The 12 checks below are the ones that matter for UK addresses, subject to source coverage. The relative weight you give each one will differ in Birmingham compared to, say, a coastal town or a former mining village.

The 12 checks

  1. 1

    Flood risk

    National flood-map sources, surface water and reservoir checks where available.

  2. 2

    Subsidence and ground stability

    BGS clay shrink-swell, mining history, geology context.

  3. 3

    EPC band and energy cost

    Current EPC, MEES rules, projected fuel cost.

  4. 4

    Building age and construction era

    Pre-war, inter-war, post-war, modern. This points to the defects to expect.

  5. 5

    Listed building or conservation area status

    Historic England listing, local conservation designations.

  6. 6

    Crime data

    Police.uk reported offences for the postcode and street.

  7. 7

    Schools and Ofsted

    Catchment, last inspection, performance bands.

  8. 8

    Broadband and mobile coverage

    Ofcom available speeds and mobile signal at the address.

  9. 9

    Transport and connectivity

    Walk to nearest station, road network, EV charger availability.

  10. 10

    Tenure

    Freehold, leasehold, share of freehold, commonhold.

  11. 11

    Price comparison

    HM Land Registry Price Paid, recent comparables on the street.

  12. 12

    Environmental and noise

    Air quality, noise sources, contaminated land history.

Headline risks for Birmingham buyers

Flood

Documented flood-prone areas include Witton, Erdington and parts of Aston along the Tame; Solihull and Yardley along the Cole; Selly Oak and Kings Norton along the Rea; and Digbeth around the Bull Ring drainage corridor. Surface-water hotspots cluster in the lower-lying parts of central Birmingham.

Read the full Birminghamflood risk guide →

Subsidence

BGS GeoSure rates clay shrink-swell susceptibility across Birmingham as moderate (lower than London Clay regions), with localised high-susceptibility patches where Mercia Mudstone weathers to thicker clay. Subsidence claim density is meaningfully lower than London but not negligible.

Read the full Birminghamsubsidence risk guide →

How to run all 12 checks for one Birmingham address

The free preview pulls available flood-zone, BGS subsidence, EPC, building age and listed status signals in about 15 seconds. The £12.99 report adds the remaining checks, buyer notes and a PDF.

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Check the property before you offer

Flood, subsidence, EPC, crime, schools, transport, broadband, tenure, age, listed status and price checks where data is available.

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Frequently asked questions

What should I check before buying a house in Birmingham?

Birmingham sits on a sandstone plateau at the watershed between the Severn and Trent basins, so the city has fewer large rivers than Manchester or London. The Tame, Cole and Rea are the main watercourses, and the Birmingham canal network sits below street level. River flood risk is concentrated in lower-lying corridors; surface water is the dominant flood mode. The 12 standard buyer checks cover flood, subsidence, EPC, building age, listed status, crime, schools, broadband, transport, tenure, price comparison, and environmental risk. The full list is on this page; per-address data is available on the property check tool.

Is Birmingham a good place to buy property?

That depends on your budget, work location, and what you want from a neighbourhood. A website cannot answer that for you. What this page can tell you is what data may exist for a Birmingham address: flood, subsidence, EPC, crime, schools, broadband, transport, tenure, listed status, price comparison, and environmental risk.

How do I run a property check on a specific Birmingham address?

Enter the postcode in the property scanner on the homepage. The free preview pulls available EPC, flood-zone, BGS subsidence, building age and listed-status signals. The £12.99 report adds the remaining checks, price comparison, buyer notes and a PDF.

Keep going

Related Birmingham buyer pages

Editorial review

Editorial owner: BiteRight Ltd, operator of MyPropertyScan. We review buyer guides against UK public property datasets, RICS survey wording, lender requirements, and common buyer questions.

Pages are updated when source coverage, property-risk guidance, survey cost assumptions, or product checks materially change. Methodology and dataset limitations are explained on the MyPropertyScan methodology page.

Sources used

We use UK public and specialist sources where they are available. Public datasets can be incomplete, delayed, or missing for some addresses. Treat them as a starting point, not as a replacement for professional advice.

Source standard: preference goes to official government datasets, statutory bodies, professional standards, and primary dataset publishers. We cite the source family on the page and explain coverage limits rather than filling gaps with unsupported estimates.

General information only. Not legal, mortgage, insurance, or surveying advice. Always confirm with your own surveyor, broker, and conveyancer before making decisions. MyPropertyScan is operated by BiteRight Ltd.

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