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HMO compliance works in Croydon

HMO compliance in Croydon, London

Lian Construction brings London rental properties up to HMO licensing standard, covering fire separation, protected escape routes, room sizes and amenity requirements. We work with landlords and letting agents across the capital on both mandatory and additional licensing schemes, surveying the property first, then pricing and scheduling the works needed to meet the conditions your local authority will check on inspection. This covers everything from a single fire door replacement to a full room-by-room reconfiguration of a converted house.

Croydon overview

HMO compliance in Croydon

One of London's largest boroughs by population, though roofing competition here is dense — we position on trust signals rather than price alone. Croydon falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For hmo compliance work in Croydon, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.

Croydon's size means its housing stock is genuinely mixed rather than dominated by one era. Older, more central parts of the borough have Victorian and Edwardian terraces typical of much of London, many now split into flats or extended over the years. Surrounding these are large swathes of interwar semi-detached and terraced housing from the 1920s and 1930s, the kind of suburban stock common across outer London boroughs of Croydon's scale. There's also a substantial amount of post-war housing, including local authority estates and low-rise blocks built to meet demand from a growing population, plus more recent flat developments in and around the town centre. For a contractor, this variety matters: a Victorian terrace roof, a 1930s semi with a hip roof, and a 1960s block each bring different materials, access issues and repair histories. Roofs and general fabric across this older stock are now reaching an age where repair or replacement is a genuine issue for a large number of homeowners at once, rather than a scattered minority, which is one reason demand across the borough tends to be steady.

A borough with one of London's largest populations means a correspondingly large number of homes needing ongoing repair and refurbishment, and Croydon has no shortage of roofing and building firms competing for that work. That density is good for choice but it also makes the market harder for homeowners to read: adverts and cold callers on price alone are common, and it's not always obvious which quotes reflect proper materials and workmanship and which are cutting corners to win the job cheaply. In a market like this, we'd rather compete on being clear about what's included, showing evidence of past work, and standing behind what we do, than get drawn into a race to the bottom on quoted price. For homeowners and landlords, the practical takeaway is to treat unusually low quotes with some caution and to ask what's actually covered before agreeing anything. Landlords in particular, often managing several properties across the borough, tend to value a contractor who turns up when promised and communicates clearly over one who was marginally cheaper on paper. That reliability gap is often where the real competition sits, even if it's not what's advertised.

Common problems in London's older housing stock

Much of London's HMO stock is Victorian and Edwardian terraced housing converted into flats or bedsits decades ago, long before current fire separation standards existed, and the problems tend to repeat from house to house across boroughs. Lath-and-plaster ceilings, common on the original upper floors of these properties, don't provide anything like the fire resistance a protected escape route needs and usually have to be overboarded with fire-rated plasterboard or, where they're too far gone, taken down and replaced entirely. Timber floorboards with gaps between joists let fire, smoke and sound travel between storeys far faster than a fire strategy assumes, so we fire-stop these voids as standard wherever we open up a ceiling or floor on an escape route, using intumescent mastic and mineral wool packed between joists rather than just boarding over the gap. Houses converted into three-storey HMOs served by a single staircase are especially exposed, since that stair is the only escape route from the upper floors and every door opening onto it, bedroom doors included, needs to hold back fire for the required time. We often find these doors replaced at some point with standard internal doors that look similar but carry no fire rating, sometimes with the intumescent strips and cold smoke seals missing entirely, which is one of the most common reasons a previously licensed HMO fails at renewal. Ex-council flats and maisonettes converted into HMOs bring a different set of issues. Concrete cross-wall construction limits where new partitions can go structurally, but it usually gives you fire and sound separation between units for free, which isn't the case in a timber-framed Victorian conversion. Single-glazed metal-framed windows original to some 1960s and 1970s blocks can complicate means of escape if a bedroom relies on a window as a secondary exit, and solid concrete floors make alarm cable runs and any new plumbing routes more involved than lifting a timber floor. Solid-wall Victorian and Edwardian houses without a cavity also need rising or penetrating damp addressed before new plasterboard and skim goes up around a fire-separation upgrade, since boarding over a damp wall just traps the moisture behind a new surface and the fire-rated board itself can be compromised by ongoing dampness within a few years. Loft and mansard conversions added to a terrace to create an extra letting room bring their own escape route problems, since a loft bedroom is often the furthest point from the front door and depends entirely on the stair below being properly protected. Where a loft was converted some years ago under permitted development without a fully protected stair, we sometimes need to upgrade doors and linings on every floor below it, not just in the loft itself, to bring the whole escape route up to the standard the additional storey now demands. Cellar or basement conversions used as an extra bedroom raise a related issue: a below-ground room usually needs an independent means of escape, such as a window or hatch to a lightwell, rather than relying solely on the internal stair, and retrofitting that into an existing solid-wall cellar is one of the more involved jobs we take on.

Fire separation and escape routes

We upgrade walls, ceilings and doors to the fire resistance a protected escape route requires, and can fit fire doors and interlinked alarms as part of the same programme.

Fire separation and protected escape route works
Room size and amenity standard improvements
Suitable for licence renewals and full HMO conversions
Regular coverage of Croydon and the wider South London area

Signs to look for

Do you need hmo compliance in Croydon?

  • Smoke alarms are battery-only rather than mains-wired and interlinked, which most councils flag as a fail at inspection.
  • Kitchen or bathroom is shared by more tenants than the borough's amenity ratio allows for that number of occupants.
  • Fire doors have visible gaps around the frame, missing intumescent strips, or self-closers that don't fully latch shut.
  • Loft, understairs or ceiling voids have visible gaps where pipework or cabling passes through without proper fire-stopping.

How the work is handled in Croydon

  1. Step 1Review borough HMO standards
  2. Step 2Survey the property against them
  3. Step 3Price and complete the required works
  4. Step 4Provide documentation for licensing

Questions

HMO compliance questions in Croydon

How quickly can Lian start hmo compliance work in Croydon?

Croydon is part of our regular South London coverage, so once we've surveyed the property we can usually confirm a start date quickly. Send the address and scope and we'll arrange the next step.

Do you cover all of Croydon?

Yes. Croydon falls within the area Lian Construction serves across Greater London.

What if the property only has one staircase, how do you deal with fire safety?

A single staircase serving all floors is common in converted Victorian and Edwardian terraces, and it effectively becomes the whole fire strategy for the property since it's the only way out from the upper floors. That usually means every door opening onto the stair, bedroom doors included, needs to be an FD30s fire door with intumescent strips and cold smoke seals, the stair enclosure itself needs to be built from fire-resisting construction from ground floor to top floor, and any cupboards, meter boxes or service risers opening onto it need to be fire-stopped and fitted with fire-rated doors of their own. On larger three-storey conversions, some fire strategies also call for a heat or smoke detector positioned directly on the stair and tied into the interlinked mains alarm system, which we'd identify and position correctly during the initial survey rather than as an afterthought.

Do you know our council's HMO standards?

We review the published HMO standards for the relevant borough before quoting, since requirements differ across London.

Can you help with a full HMO conversion?

Yes. We can scope partition changes, fire separation, room sizes and amenities for a full HMO conversion project.

What's usually the biggest compliance gap you find in existing HMOs?

Fire separation is the most common issue: missing or degraded fire doors, unsealed penetrations through ceilings and walls, and escape routes that have been compromised by later alterations. Room sizes and amenity ratios can also fall short of current standards.

Talk to Lian Construction about Croydon

Send the site address in Croydon, photos if available, and the hmo compliance work you need. We can review the scope and arrange the next step.

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