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Bristol · Subsidence Risk

Subsidence risk in Bristol: what to check before buying

Bristol bedrock is predominantly Mercia Mudstone Group across most of the city, transitioning to Triassic and Carboniferous limestones around Clifton and the gorge. Superficial deposits include river-terrace alluvium along the Avon. The mix produces a moderate clay shrink-swell profile city-wide with localised limestone sinkhole risk in specific neighbourhoods.

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

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BGS clay susceptibility for Bristol

BGS GeoSure rates Bristol as moderate clay susceptibility, lower than London but higher than Bath. Localised high-susceptibility patches exist where Mercia Mudstone weathers to thicker clay. Subsidence claim density is lower than London but meaningfully present.

BGS GeoSure publishes shrink-swell susceptibility ratings at 1:50,000 scale, covering the whole of Great Britain. Most insurer subsidence-risk models begin with this dataset. Conveyancers' environmental searches use BGS data plus mining and contamination layers to produce a per-address report.

Trees, drainage and other risk factors in Bristol

Trees on Mercia Mudstone within proximity of foundations remain the primary trigger. Historic Coal Measures workings on the city's east edge (Kingswood/Hanham coalfield) introduce mining-era subsidence risk. The Avon Gorge limestone area carries small but documented karst/sinkhole risks.

Three checks the survey should cover:

Mining-era subsidence in Bristol

Historic Kingswood/Hanham coalfield mining on the eastern fringe of the city and into South Gloucestershire. The Coal Authority CON29M is standard practice for any property within or near the coalfield boundary. Limestone quarrying is also documented around Clifton; very rarely a buyer-relevant issue but worth confirming.

What subsidence means for your mortgage and insurance

Lenders treat historic, stabilised subsidence as standard if there is a structural engineer's report and any underpinning is documented. Active subsidence triggers retentions, specialist insurer placement, and in some cases lender refusal until remediation is complete and stable.

Insurance is the bigger ongoing constraint. A property with a prior subsidence claim sits in a constrained insurer market. The existing insurer typically continues cover but new business placement is harder. Disclosure of any prior claim is required on the seller's TA6 form.

How to check your specific address

City-wide context is orientation. Per-address checks before offer:

  1. 1Pull the BGS shrink-swell susceptibility for the postcode (free at bgs.ac.uk/datasets/geosure).
  2. 2Order a Coal Authority CON29M report if the property is in a historic coalfield boundary. Your conveyancer arranges this.
  3. 3Read the TA6 form for any prior subsidence claim, structural movement, or insurance involvement.
  4. 4Commission a RICS Level 3 (Building Survey) for any property over 60 years old in a high-clay-susceptibility area.

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BGS clay susceptibility, building age, tree context and the things to ask your surveyor.

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Frequently asked questions

Is subsidence common in Bristol?

Bristol bedrock is predominantly Mercia Mudstone Group across most of the city, transitioning to Triassic and Carboniferous limestones around Clifton and the gorge. Superficial deposits include river-terrace alluvium along the Avon. The mix produces a moderate clay shrink-swell profile city-wide with localised limestone sinkhole risk in specific neighbourhoods. BGS GeoSure rates Bristol as moderate clay susceptibility, lower than London but higher than Bath. Localised high-susceptibility patches exist where Mercia Mudstone weathers to thicker clay. Subsidence claim density is lower than London but meaningfully present.

Will subsidence affect my mortgage in Bristol?

Lenders treat historic, stabilised subsidence as standard if a structural engineer's sign-off is in place. Active or progressive subsidence triggers retentions, specialist insurer placement, and in some cases lender refusal until remediation is complete.

What should the survey cover for subsidence in Bristol?

Trees on Mercia Mudstone within proximity of foundations remain the primary trigger. Historic Coal Measures workings on the city's east edge (Kingswood/Hanham coalfield) introduce mining-era subsidence risk. The Avon Gorge limestone area carries small but documented karst/sinkhole risks. The surveyor should record any cracks (BRE Digest 251 categories), assess proximity of trees and drains, and recommend a structural engineer's report where category 2+ cracking or active movement is suspected.

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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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