Skip to main content

Survey finding

In-situ concrete construction: survey, mortgage and what to do

Needs attention

In-situ concrete construction covers Laing Easiform, Wimpey No-Fines and one-offs. This page covers what's standard and what's a flag.

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

Popular right now

or pick one

Finding

In-situ concrete construction

Needs attention

What this usually means

In-situ concrete construction means concrete walls poured on site between shuttering, rather than from precast panels. Includes Laing Easiform, Wimpey No-Fines, and one-off self-builds. Generally not designated defective, the construction is sound. Buyer concerns are thermal performance, cracking, and sometimes lender appetite.

Why it matters

In-situ concrete is mortgageable on most mainstream UK lender panels with a satisfactory engineer's report. The construction is fundamentally sound; cracking and thermal performance are the main flagged items.

Ask your surveyor

  • Check:Is the property a recognised in-situ concrete system (Laing Easiform, Wimpey No-Fines) or a one-off?
  • Check:Are there visible vertical or horizontal cracks?

Ask the seller

  • Check:What is the construction system and date?
  • Check:Has any structural or thermal upgrade been carried out?

Next steps

  • Confirm with your broker which lender will accept this construction type before paying for any further surveys.
  • Order a structural engineer's report if no recent one exists in the property's records.

Browse all findings

Free property preview

Cross-check this finding with EPC, building age, and address-specific risk data.

What you need to know

Severity

2/ 5

Maintenance item. Worth quoting and including in negotiation.

Typical cost to fix

Crack repair: £600–£2,500. External wall insulation upgrade: £8,000–£15,000+. Specialist engineer's report £400–£900.

Mortgage impact

Many mainstream lenders accept with engineer's report. Some restrict LTV; specialist lenders fill gaps.

Insurance impact

Standard buildings insurance widely available.

When to pull out

Pull out only if engineer flags active issues, seller refuses to engage, and lender refuses.

When to renegotiate, and by how much

Negotiate on engineer's quoted remediation plus 15%.

Thinking of pulling out or renegotiating? What to do after a bad survey

Run the check on this address

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.

Run the check

Check the property before you offer

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

Run a free preview

Read next

Wimpey No-Fines concrete house , often sits near in-situ concrete construction 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

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.

We use a minimal set of analytics to understand which pages help buyers and which don't. No advertising cookies, no third-party tracking. You can decline and the site works the same. Privacy policy.