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Survey finding

Wimpey No-Fines house: survey, mortgage and what to do

Needs attention

Wimpey No-Fines house mortgage problems and Wimpey No-Fines house survey questions are common despite the construction NOT being designated defective. This page covers what to look for and how lenders treat it.

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

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Finding

Wimpey No-Fines concrete house

Needs attention

What this usually means

Wimpey No-Fines is a poured concrete construction method used by George Wimpey & Co between roughly 1946 and the 1970s. The walls are mass concrete with no fine aggregate (so no sand), the cement binds gravel-sized aggregate directly. About 300,000 Wimpey No-Fines houses were built in the UK. Unlike Airey or Cornish Unit, Wimpey No-Fines was NOT designated defective under the Housing Defects Act 1984, but is non-standard construction with documented defects (vertical wall cracking, render spalling, thermal performance issues).

Why it matters

Wimpey No-Fines is mortgageable but not by every lender. Mainstream UK lenders' panels split, some accept readily with a satisfactory survey, others restrict to specialist panels. The construction is fundamentally sound; the cosmetic and thermal issues are the headline buyer concerns.

Ask your surveyor

  • Check:Are there visible vertical cracks in the no-fines concrete walls?
  • Check:Is the render in good condition or showing horizontal cracking above window drips?

Ask the seller

  • Check:Has any concrete or render repair been carried out?
  • Check:Has external wall insulation been added?

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.

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What you need to know

Severity

3/ 5

Significant. Specialist follow-up usually warranted before exchange.

Typical cost to fix

Vertical crack repair (specialist concrete repair): £600–£2,500. Render replacement: £4,000–£10,000+. External wall insulation upgrade (recommended for thermal): £8,000–£15,000+. Specialist structural engineer's report £400–£900.

Mortgage impact

Mortgageable on a meaningful share of mainstream lender panels with a satisfactory structural engineer's report. Some lenders restrict LTV to 75–85%. A small number decline outright. Always confirm with broker before paying for the survey.

Insurance impact

Standard buildings insurance is widely available on Wimpey No-Fines. Premiums vary but the property is not in the specialist non-standard-construction insurance market.

When to pull out

Pull out only if the structural engineer's report flags active concrete deterioration. The seller refuses to engage, and your lender refuses.

When to renegotiate, and by how much

If standard construction issues (cracking, render) are flagged, negotiate on engineer's quoted remediation plus 15%. If the property is sound, treat as standard.

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

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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.

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