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Survey finding

Drainage issues flagged in your survey

Needs attention

Drainage is one of the areas surveyors can only assess superficially in a standard inspection, which is why CCTV survey recommendations are common. This page explains what drainage concerns typically look like and how to follow up before exchange.

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

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Finding

Drainage issues

Needs attention

What this usually means

Drainage issues can range from simple blockages to collapsed or cracked pipes, shared drainage arrangements that aren't formally adopted, or overloaded soakaways. Surveyors recommend a CCTV drain survey because they cannot inspect drainage directly in a standard visual survey. Defective drainage can cause damp, subsidence (particularly on clay ground), and garden flooding.

Why it matters

Repair costs vary significantly: jetting a blockage is minor, while replacing a collapsed run or resolving a shared adoption dispute can be substantial. Some older properties have unmodified Victorian-era drainage or shared arrangements that raise maintenance and legal responsibility questions.

Ask your surveyor

  • Check:Are there specific signs of drainage problems (damp, subsidence near drains, slow drainage, smells) or is this a precautionary recommendation?
  • Check:Do you know whether the drainage is adopted by the water company or is private?

Ask the seller

  • Check:Have drains ever backed up, required jetting, or been repaired during your ownership?
  • Check:Is the drainage adopted by the local water company or is it a private arrangement, and are there any shared drain agreements?

Next steps

  • Commission a CCTV drain survey from an independent specialist before exchange, particularly if the property has older drainage or the surveyor raised specific concerns.
  • Ask your solicitor to check the drainage search (CON29DW) for the boundaries of adopted sewers.

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Pair this surveyor's flag with available flood-zone data and manual checks for surface water, reservoir, and national flood maps.

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The Survey Decoder explains the wording. The full report adds address-specific flood, subsidence, EPC, crime, listed status, building age and price comparison data, so a single finding isn't judged in isolation.

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Flood-zone signals where available, with the manual follow-up checks spelled out.

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Read next

Damp , often sits near drainage issues on a survey and is the next thing to check.

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

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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.

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