Party Wall Act 1996: Neighbour Notices, Agreements and What Builders Must Know

Quick Answer: The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 requires building owners to give written notice to adjoining owners before carrying out certain types of work — including work on or near a shared wall, excavating within 3 metres of a neighbour's foundations, or building a new wall on the boundary. Notice periods are 1 or 2 months depending on the work type. If an adjoining owner consents in writing, work can proceed; if they object or don't respond, a Party Wall Award (a formal agreement) must be agreed through appointed surveyors before work starts.

Summary

The Party Wall etc. Act 1996 is a piece of legislation that applies across England and Wales. It creates a framework for preventing and resolving disputes about works that affect shared walls, boundary walls, and excavations near neighbouring buildings. Despite being over 25 years old, it remains poorly understood by many tradespeople and homeowners — leading to disputes, injunctions, and costly delays on otherwise straightforward projects.

The Act does not give building owners the right to do whatever they want with party walls — it gives them a procedure to follow that protects both parties. The adjoining owner (the neighbour) has the right to appoint a surveyor at the building owner's expense if they dissent, and any work carried out without proper notice is technically a trespass, regardless of how minor it appears.

For builders and contractors, the key practical point is this: you are not personally liable under the Act (liability sits with the building owner who commissioned the work), but knowingly starting notifiable work without a Party Wall Award in place exposes your client to legal risk and can result in the work being stopped by injunction. Understanding the trigger points, notice requirements, and what a Party Wall Award covers is essential for any tradesperson working on semi-detached or terraced properties, extensions, loft conversions, or basement projects.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Work Type Act Section Notice Period Trigger
New wall on or astride boundary Section 1 1 month Any new wall on boundary line
Cutting into party wall Section 2(2)(a) 2 months Making good, inserting beams, flashing
Raising or underpinning party wall Section 2(2)(b)/(d) 2 months Loft conversions, subsidence repairs
Demolishing and rebuilding party wall Section 2(2)(c) 2 months Major structural work
Cutting off projections (chimney breasts, etc.) Section 2(2)(g) 2 months Removal of chimney breasts in party wall
Excavation within 3 m, deeper than neighbour's foundations Section 6(1) 1 month Basements, deep footings
Excavation within 6 m intersecting 45-degree plane Section 6(2) 1 month Deeper excavations further away
Building entirely on own land (no boundary contact) Not covered N/A Act does not apply

Detailed Guidance

What Triggers the Act: Common Scenarios

The Act is triggered more often than many builders realise. Common project types and their Act implications:

Loft conversions (terraced or semi-detached)

Side and rear extensions

Basement excavations

Chimney breast removal

Internal works (replastering, rewiring, fitting kitchen)

The Notice Process Step by Step

PARTY WALL NOTICE PROCESS
│
├─ STEP 1: Identify whether work triggers the Act
│   Use the table above; when in doubt, take professional advice
│
├─ STEP 2: Identify all adjoining owners
│   Check Land Registry for all freeholders and leaseholders
│   with more than 1 year remaining on their lease
│
├─ STEP 3: Serve written notice on each adjoining owner
│   Must include:
│   - Building owner's name and address
│   - Description of intended works
│   - Date works are proposed to start
│   - Plans and sections where appropriate (Section 2 works)
│   Deliver by hand, recorded post, or (if agreed) email
│
├─ STEP 4: Wait for response (14 days)
│   ├─ Written consent received → Work can proceed on the agreed date
│   │   Retain the written consent on file
│   │
│   └─ Dissent received, or no response after 14 days
│       ├─ Both parties agree on a single Agreed Surveyor
│       │   → Agreed Surveyor prepares the Award
│       │
│       └─ Parties cannot agree on one surveyor
│           → Each party appoints their own surveyor
│           → The two surveyors appoint a Third Surveyor (referee)
│           → Award prepared by the two appointed surveyors
│
├─ STEP 5: Award served on both parties
│   Parties have 14 days to appeal to a county court
│   (rarely done in practice)
│
└─ STEP 6: Works proceed in accordance with Award
    Award sets out: access rights, working hours, damage schedule,
    method statement, and any special conditions

What a Party Wall Award Contains

A Party Wall Award (sometimes called a Party Wall Agreement, though the Act uses "Award") is a legal document. It typically includes:

The Award is binding on both parties and their successors in title. A buyer purchasing a property where party wall work was carried out without a valid Award inherits the liability.

Section 8: Right of Access

Section 8 of the Act gives the building owner (and their workers) a right of access to the adjoining property to carry out the notifiable works. This is a statutory right — it does not require the adjoining owner's permission once an Award is in place. However:

Costs and Fees

Party Wall surveyor fees are not regulated — they vary widely. A simple Award for a straightforward loft conversion might cost £800–£1,200 total; a basement project with multiple adjoining owners can cost £5,000–£20,000+ in surveyor fees.

Common Mistakes Made by Builders

Frequently Asked Questions

My client says they've spoken to the neighbour and it's all fine — do we still need to follow the process?

Yes. The Act requires written consent or a formal Award. An informal verbal agreement has no legal standing under the Act, and if a dispute arises later there will be no documentation to rely on. Ensure written consent is obtained and retained before work starts.

What happens if we start work without serving notice?

The adjoining owner can apply to the county court for an injunction to stop the works. Courts regularly grant these. The building owner will also be liable for the cost of rectifying any works carried out without a valid Award and for any damage caused. There is no fine under the Act itself, but the injunction risk and potential damages are serious.

Does the Act apply to a new build where there is no existing party wall?

If a new wall is to be built on or astride a boundary, Section 1 of the Act applies even if there is currently no wall there. If the new building does not touch the boundary and excavations are not within 3 or 6 metres of any neighbouring building, the Act may not be triggered — but always check the specific distances.

How long does a Party Wall Award remain valid?

An Award does not expire, but it only covers the works specifically described in it. If the scope of work changes materially, a supplementary Award may be required. Once the works are complete and any damage made good, the Award has served its purpose but remains a document of record.

Can a tenant serve or receive a Party Wall notice?

Leaseholders with more than 1 year remaining on their lease are "owners" for the purposes of the Act. A tenant with a long lease must be served notice just as a freeholder would. A short-term assured shorthold tenant is not an "owner" for Act purposes and does not need to be served notice, though their landlord (as freeholder) does.

Regulations & Standards