Get matched

Get matched with a vetted party wall surveyor

Confirm whether the Act applies and get the right notices and award handled — on a clear basis, with no obligation, and you stay in control.

The short answer

Share a few details about your project — what work you're planning, how close it is to a neighbour, and how many adjoining owners are affected — and we'll match you with a vetted party wall surveyor who confirms whether the work is notifiable, drafts and serves the correct notices, records a schedule of condition, and produces the award where one is needed. Matching is free, there's no obligation, and you decide whether to go ahead. This is information, not legal advice.

The more a surveyor knows up front, the more accurately they can confirm whether you need an agreement at all and what it will involve. Have the details below ready before you request matching.

Have these ready

What happens after you ask to be matched

  1. We pass your details to a vetted party wall surveyor who covers your area.
  2. They confirm whether your work is notifiable, draft any notices, and quote on a clear basis.
  3. You decide whether to proceed — no pressure, no obligation.
Why vetted: we match you with surveyors who have been checked, because a party wall matter affects a neighbour's property and the work needs to follow the Act correctly to be valid and fair to both sides.

Ready to get matched?

Request matching and a vetted party wall surveyor will be in touch to confirm whether the Act applies and act on a clear basis.

Free to be matched. You agree any fee with the surveyor directly.

Frequently asked questions

Does it cost anything to be matched?

No. Matching is free and there's no obligation. If you proceed, you agree any fee directly with the surveyor for the work they set out and you approve.

Will the surveyor be vetted?

Yes. We match you with vetted party wall surveyors, because the work affects a neighbour's property and must follow the Party Wall etc. Act 1996 correctly.

Can the surveyor act for both me and my neighbour?

In many cases yes — an agreed surveyor can act impartially for both owners, which is usually the lowest-priced route. Where each owner prefers their own surveyor, that can be arranged too.

Figures on this page are typical UK ranges drawn from published sources and depend on your specific project. They are guidance, not a quotation, and not legal advice.