Targeted property surveys for Brighton's coastal housing stock — from Regency conversions to Edwardian terraces








Brighton and Hove has 121,401 households, and close to half of them are flats — many converted from large Regency and Victorian townhouses that line the seafront and surrounding streets. These older buildings face a particular set of challenges: salt-laden sea air accelerates weathering, wind-driven rain penetrates rendered facades, and the city's signature construction material — bungaroosh, a grab-bag mix of lime mortar, chalk, flint and rubble found almost nowhere else in the UK — creates survey complexities that mortgage valuations simply don't address. A RICS Level 2 Survey gives you the structured, traffic-light assessment you need to make an informed decision on any Brighton property purchase.

£419,000
Average House Price
48%
Homes That Are Flats
Highest outside London
From £420
Level 2 Survey Cost
Brighton pricing
34
Conservation Areas
18% of the city's urban area
Using listing data from home.co.uk and property data from homedata.co.uk
Brighton’s coastal setting and its past as a Regency seaside resort have shaped the local market. Much of the housing stock dates from 1780 to 1914, and a large share of it has been split into flats over the years. Around 20% of Brighton households now live in a converted flat or bedsit, more than five times the national average. Those conversions can bring shared structural elements, party wall issues and historic alterations that a standard mortgage valuation will not pick up. A RICS Level 2 Survey looks at the visible condition of the building and marks defects with a clear traffic-light system, so you know where you stand before exchanging contracts.
Roofing, walls, windows, guttering, drainage and internal finishes all come under the Level 2 survey. Our surveyor inspects the property visually and grades each item as condition 1, no repair needed, condition 2, defects that need attention but are not urgent, or condition 3, serious problems needing immediate action. That structure matters in Brighton, where faults such as cracked stucco rendering hiding deteriorating bungaroosh walls, or corroded wall ties in post-war seafront blocks, often sit behind smart-looking surfaces and slip past buyers at viewings.
Brighton and Hove City Council oversees 34 conservation areas that cover about 18% of the city’s urban footprint. Homes within these areas face limits on external alterations, which can alter both renovation budgets and timescales. The council also keeps a register of roughly 1,220 listed buildings across all three grades, including 24 Grade I structures. Our Level 2 survey report will flag any listed building or conservation area status, so your conveyancer can talk through planning constraints before you commit to the purchase.
Source: ONS Census 2021. Brighton has one of the highest proportions of converted flats in England.

Bungaroosh is a building material unique to Brighton, Hove, and parts of Lewes and Worthing. It consists of lime mortar mixed with chalk, beach flint, broken bricks, and assorted rubble — essentially whatever Georgian and Victorian builders had to hand. Much of the internal walling in Brighton's Regency-era properties is bungaroosh, hidden behind layers of render and stucco. The material is highly porous, prone to crumbling when exposed to moisture, and cannot be treated with standard damp-proofing methods. A Level 2 survey will assess visible signs of deterioration in rendered walls, which often indicates bungaroosh problems beneath the surface.
Prices based on a standard 3-bed property. Brighton prices reflect South East England rates and the complexity of the city's older housing stock.
The RICS surveyors we instruct in Brighton know the city’s building types inside out. They can tell the difference between harmless render cracking and structural movement in bungaroosh walls. They understand what salt spray does to wall ties, timber and ironwork on seafront properties. They also know which parts of Brighton sit on chalk geology with sinkhole risk from historic underground mining, a hazard that catches many buyers out.

Enter the property details — address, type, approximate age, and number of bedrooms. You'll receive a price straight away. If the property suits a Level 2 survey, you can book and pay online. We contact the seller or their agent within 24 hours to arrange access to the property.
A local RICS surveyor visits the property and carries out a thorough visual inspection. For a typical Brighton Victorian terrace or Regency conversion flat, expect the visit to take 2 to 4 hours. Properties with complex layouts, multiple floors, or significant period features may take longer.
The written report arrives within 2 to 6 working days. It uses the RICS traffic-light condition rating system to flag defects at three severity levels. Our bookings team can talk you through the findings and help arrange follow-up specialist inspections — such as a damp survey or full structural assessment — if the report recommends them.
Brighton sits on chalk bedrock, and the city has a history of sinkhole events caused by the collapse of old chalk mine workings — known locally as deneholes. These are medieval extraction pits with narrow shafts descending up to 30 metres, opening into underground chambers. Many were never formally recorded. While large-scale sinkholes are rare, subsidence from these voids does occur, and standard searches may not reveal their presence. Ask your surveyor and conveyancer about chalk mining risk for the specific property location, particularly in areas north of the city centre.
Brighton’s built environment reads like the story of a fishing village that became England’s most fashionable seaside resort in the late 18th century. The Regency period, roughly 1780 to 1837, left behind the city’s white stuccoed terraces and squares. Brunswick Square, Regency Square and the sweeping crescents of Kemp Town all belong to this era, and bungaroosh sits behind their elegant facades. Then came Victorian growth north into Hanover, Prestonville and Fiveways, with red-brick terraces and larger villas. By the Edwardian period, Hove’s grid of avenues had taken shape as the western suburbs. After the war, council estates appeared at Moulsecoomb, Whitehawk and Bevendean, alongside seafront blocks that now have their own maintenance headaches from coastal exposure.
That layering of styles means a Brighton buyer might be weighing up anything from an 1820s Regency flat with bungaroosh party walls to a 1960s purpose-built block with corroding steel wall ties, and both carry survey-related risk. Flat conversions add another complication. Many large period houses were divided during the mid-20th century, sometimes with little thought for structure. Shared roofs, communal drainage and unclear maintenance responsibilities come up often. A Level 2 survey records these points in a standard format, showing which elements need attention and helping you budget for repairs before completion.
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Brighton’s average property sells for around £419,000. A Level 2 survey starting from £420 works out at roughly 0.1% of that price. Set against repair bills you may not spot until after completion, that becomes a practical outlay rather than a nuisance fee. Tackling penetrating damp in a Brighton seafront flat can cost £3,000 to £8,000 depending on the extent of the damage. Replacing corroded wall ties in a post-war block usually runs between £2,000 and £5,000. Repointing brickwork worn down by years of salt-laden coastal wind can top £4,000 for a standard terraced house.
Without a survey, those problems tend to appear after exchange of contracts and once you have moved in. With a Level 2 report in hand, you have written evidence of the property’s condition, and that gives you room to renegotiate the price, ask the seller to carry out repairs before completion, or walk away if the defects are serious enough. For Brighton’s older housing stock, where cosmetic finishes often hide deeper issues, it is one of the simplest ways to protect yourself financially.

Brighton Level 2 surveys start from around £420 for a standard 2- to 3-bed property. Prices increase with property value and size — expect £550 to £800 for larger homes or those valued above £500,000. Brighton's slightly higher pricing compared to the national average of £395 reflects the South East premium and the additional time surveyors spend assessing the city's older and more complex building stock.
A Level 2 survey works well for Regency-era conversion flats that are in broadly reasonable condition and haven't been heavily altered. The surveyor will assess all visible elements of your flat and the shared parts of the building. If the property has bungaroosh walls, signs of significant damp, or has undergone major structural changes, your surveyor may recommend upgrading to a Level 3 survey for a more thorough investigation of the building fabric.
For a standard Brighton flat or terraced house, the on-site inspection typically takes 2 to 4 hours. Larger properties with multiple floors, period features, or complex layouts may take longer. The written report follows within 2 to 6 working days and uses the RICS condition rating system to present findings clearly. Our team contacts you once the report is ready and can answer questions about the content.
A Level 2 survey is a visual inspection, so the surveyor cannot see through render or plaster to confirm bungaroosh behind the walls. However, experienced Brighton surveyors recognise the telltale signs: bulging render, uneven wall surfaces, damp patches that don't respond to standard treatment, and the building's age and location. If bungaroosh is suspected, the report will flag it and may recommend a more invasive Level 3 investigation or a specialist assessment.
Absolutely. Brighton's seafront and near-coastal properties face accelerated weathering from salt-laden air and wind-driven rain. Your surveyor will pay particular attention to external render, metalwork corrosion, window frames, and wall tie condition — all of which deteriorate faster in marine environments. Properties on the seafront, Kemptown, Hove seafront, and the exposed hillside areas of Whitehawk and Roedean are especially affected by these coastal conditions.
For a Victorian terrace in good visible condition that hasn't been significantly altered, a Level 2 survey provides a solid assessment. If the property is older than 1880, shows signs of structural movement, has had extensions or basement work, or you plan major renovations, a Level 3 is the better choice. Brighton Victorian terraces in areas like Hanover and Prestonville often have steep-site foundations and rear additions that benefit from the deeper Level 3 analysis.
If the surveyor identifies condition 3 defects — serious issues requiring urgent attention — you have several options. You can renegotiate the purchase price to account for repair costs, request that the seller fixes the problems before completion, or withdraw from the purchase entirely. The report gives your solicitor documented evidence to support any renegotiation. In Brighton, common condition 3 findings include significant damp penetration, failed render concealing deteriorated walls, and defective roof coverings damaged by coastal storms.
For flats, the Level 2 survey covers both the individual unit and the shared or communal parts of the building — including the roof, external walls, communal hallways, and shared drainage. This is particularly relevant in Brighton where so many flats are conversions of older houses. The surveyor will note the condition of shared elements and flag any issues that could lead to future service charge demands or disputes with freeholders. Understanding the condition of the whole building is just as important as the state of your individual flat.
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Targeted property surveys for Brighton's coastal housing stock — from Regency conversions to Edwardian terraces
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Homemove is a trading name of HM Haus Group Ltd (Company No. 13873779, registered in England & Wales). Homemove Mortgages Ltd (Company No. 15947693) is an Appointed Representative of TMG Direct Limited, trading as TMG Mortgage Network, which is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority (FRN 786245). Homemove Mortgages Ltd is entered on the FCA Register as an Appointed Representative (FRN 1022429). You can check registrations at NewRegister or by calling 0800 111 6768.