Outer South London borough with steady demand for property repairs and roofing, and comparatively light competition. Sutton falls well within the South London ground Lian Construction covers on a regular basis. For hmo compliance work in Sutton, that local knowledge means fewer surprises once work is on site and a team that already understands the borough's typical property stock.
Sutton's housing stock reflects its character as an outer London suburb that grew substantially in the interwar years. Semi-detached and detached houses from the 1920s and 1930s make up a large share of the borough, many with pitched roofs, bay windows and the kind of construction typical of that period's suburban expansion. There are also pockets of Victorian and Edwardian terraces closer to established town centres, along with postwar estates and more recent infill development where older properties have been replaced or gardens built on. Compared with inner London boroughs, gardens and off-street parking are more common, and roof areas tend to be larger relative to floor space given the prevalence of semi-detached and detached forms. This mix means repair needs vary a lot by street and era: interwar roofs and rendering reaching the point where replacement or significant repair is due, Victorian terraces with older brickwork and roofing needing more specialist attention, and newer builds generally needing lighter maintenance. Homeowners should expect the right approach to depend heavily on the age and construction type of the specific property rather than a one-size-fits-all fix.
The blurb notes steady demand for repairs and roofing alongside comparatively light competition, which is a useful combination for homeowners to understand. Steady demand generally reflects the age profile of the housing stock described above: a lot of interwar and older properties reaching points where roofs, guttering, rendering and general fabric need attention, plus the usual run of extensions, loft conversions and general refurbishment that outer London homeowners commission as families grow into their houses. Comparatively light competition compared with more contested inner London markets can work in a homeowner's favour in terms of choice and pricing, but it also means fewer contractors actively covering the area day to day. In practice that can mean it is worth booking well ahead for roofing work in particular, since fewer specialist crews are likely to be working locally at any given time. It also makes it more important to check credentials, insurance and past work carefully, since a thinner pool of contractors means less peer competition keeping standards visible. For landlords with rental stock in the borough, the same logic applies to routine maintenance and compliance work, where reliability and turnaround time matter as much as price.
What drives the cost of HMO compliance work
Pricing an HMO compliance job depends far more on how far the property is from standard than on its overall size. A property that only needs fire doors, interlinked alarms and some fire-stopping to ceiling and floor voids is a relatively contained job, and can often be costed and scheduled within a matter of weeks once survey and pricing are agreed. Where partition walls need to move to correct undersized rooms, or a bathroom or second kitchen needs to be added from scratch, costs rise quickly once plumbing, mechanical extraction, electrical first and second fix, plastering and matching the existing finish are all factored in.
Structural changes add both cost and time for building control sign-off. Removing a load-bearing wall to reconfigure a floor and installing a steel beam to carry the load above, or altering a staircase to improve the escape route, both need calculations from a structural engineer and inspection at set stages, which extends the programme even where the physical work itself is quick. Older fire doors are rarely a straightforward swap: many original door openings in Victorian and Edwardian houses are undersized, out of square, or have settled over a century of movement, so fitting a certified FD30s door set often means adjusting the lining, and sometimes taking back a course or two of brickwork or building up the reveal, rather than dropping a new door into the existing frame.
Access matters more than people expect. A mid-terrace property with no side access means materials, including plasterboard and fire-rated stud timber, have to go through the house, which slows the job compared with a property that has rear access or off-street parking directly outside. We also factor in whether tenants remain in situ, since working around an occupied property with notice periods and room-by-room access takes longer than a vacant one where several trades can work simultaneously.
We survey the property first and price against the specific list of works the applicable licensing conditions require, rather than quoting a blanket day rate or a per-room average, because two outwardly similar terraced houses on the same street can need very different amounts of work depending on what's already been done to them, when they were last rewired, and how the loft and floor voids were left by previous alterations.
Statutory costs sit alongside the building work itself and are worth budgeting for separately. A structural engineer's calculations for a steel beam, a building control application fee, and in some cases a party wall agreement with a neighbour if work touches a shared wall or foundation, can add a few hundred to a couple of thousand pounds before a single wall is opened up, depending on the scope. Scaffolding or a tower for external fire door work, cladding repairs above ground floor level, or access to a rear elevation without side access, is a further cost that's easy to overlook when comparing quotes that don't specify access equipment separately from labour and materials.
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.