The Government has announced a major package of reforms to the home buying and selling process, aimed at making residential conveyancing faster, more transparent and less stressful. The proposals centre on giving buyers and sellers better information at the start of a transaction, introducing earlier binding agreements, and moving the process onto modern digital systems.
According to the Government, the changes are intended to cut buying times by around four weeks, save first-time buyers an average of £650, and roughly halve the number of sales that fall through. The reforms will be introduced in phases over the course of this Parliament, so most of the measures are not yet in force.
For anyone buying or selling a property on the Wirral, the announcement is a timely reminder that early preparation remains one of the most important parts of a smooth conveyancing transaction.
The Government’s announcement sets out a proposed “shake-up” of the home buying process. The key proposals include:
The Government describes the current system as broken. It says the average home purchase takes around 120 days, roughly one in three sales falls through, and failed transactions cost sellers about £400 million a year and the wider economy up to £1.5 billion a year. The reforms are designed to bring more information to the start of the process, so that buyers, sellers, estate agents, lenders and conveyancers can identify and resolve issues earlier.
At present, many important parts of the conveyancing process only begin after an offer has been accepted. This can mean that issues with title, searches, leasehold information, planning documents, management packs or mortgage requirements are not discovered until weeks into the transaction.
For buyers, this can be frustrating and expensive. For sellers, it can mean lost time if a buyer withdraws or if the chain breaks down. Common causes of delay in residential conveyancing include:
The Government’s proposals aim to bring more of this information to the start of the process, so that potential problems surface earlier rather than late in the transaction.
One of the central proposals is the introduction of upfront “sales packs”. These would require key information to be available when a property is listed for sale, rather than waiting until after an offer is accepted.
Although the detail is still to be confirmed, a sales pack could include information such as:
This is intended to give buyers a clearer picture before they commit significant time and money to a purchase.
Potentially, yes. The Government estimates the reforms could cut around four weeks from the average transaction. If the right information is available at the start, conveyancers can begin reviewing the legal position much earlier, reducing time spent waiting for documents, raising basic enquiries or discovering problems late in the day.
However, conveyancing will still require careful legal work. Even with more information upfront, buyers will still need proper advice on title, searches, mortgage conditions, leasehold obligations, rights of way, restrictions, planning issues and any other legal risks. A faster process should not mean a less careful one.
The Government has also set out plans for earlier binding agreements, sometimes described as binding conditional contracts. The aim is to make a transaction legally binding much earlier — potentially once an offer is accepted — so that neither side can simply walk away months into the process without a legitimate reason.
Under the proposals, a party who withdraws without a valid reason, or who fails to meet the agreed terms, could face a financial penalty. The Government has called this a fundamental change to the current system and has said it will work with the industry to set fair penalty levels, define clear exceptions and establish a way of resolving disputes.
Importantly, the Government has confirmed that binding agreements will not be introduced until upfront sales packs are well established. This is intended to ensure buyers are not committed to a purchase before they have access to the key information about a property.
These changes could help reduce problems such as gazumping, gazundering and late withdrawals. However, the detail will be crucial. Before entering into any binding commitment, buyers and sellers will need to understand exactly what they are agreeing to, what conditions apply and what financial consequences could follow if the transaction does not proceed.
If you are thinking of selling, the message is clear: prepare early. Even before any new rules come into force, sellers can reduce delays by getting key information together at the outset. This may include:
Early preparation can make a real difference, particularly with leasehold properties, where management packs and ground rent or service charge information can take time to obtain.
For buyers, more upfront information should make it easier to decide whether a property is right for them before spending money on surveys, mortgage applications and legal work. Even so, buyers should still take independent legal advice before exchange of contracts or before entering into any binding agreement.
A conveyancing solicitor can help you understand:
At Burd Ward Solicitors, our residential conveyancing team assists clients with property sales, purchases, remortgages and transfers of equity across Wallasey, Wirral, Merseyside and beyond.
Whether you are a first-time buyer, selling your home, buying a leasehold property or moving as part of a chain, our conveyancing solicitors can guide you through the process and help identify potential issues as early as possible. The Government’s proposals may change how property transactions are handled in future, but the need for clear, practical legal advice remains the same.
If you are planning to buy or sell a property, early advice can help avoid unnecessary delays. Contact Burd Ward Solicitors to speak to our residential conveyancing team or request a conveyancing quote.
No. The Government has announced proposals and a phased roadmap, but the main legal changes are not yet in force. A Code of Practice for estate agents and guidance on the quality of property listings are expected later this year; consultation on estate agent qualifications and expanded digital tools is expected from 2027; and comprehensive legislation to require sales packs, binding contracts and digital systems is expected by the end of this Parliament.
An upfront sales pack is expected to contain key information about a property at the point it is marketed for sale. The aim is to give buyers, sellers, estate agents, lenders and conveyancers important information earlier, rather than waiting until after an offer has been accepted.
The exact requirements are still to be confirmed, but the Government has referred to information about a property’s condition, leasehold costs and chain status. Depending on the final rules, sales packs may also include title information, planning documents, building regulation certificates, leasehold documents, search information and other property details.
Yes. Even if more information is provided upfront, buyers and sellers will still need legal advice on title, contract terms, searches, leasehold obligations, lender requirements, source of funds checks, exchange and completion.
The Government says the reforms are intended to cut buying times by around four weeks and to save first-time buyers an average of £650. Whether this is achieved in practice will depend on the final rules, how the property industry adapts, and how quickly reliable information can be made available at the start of a transaction.
Earlier binding agreements are intended to make both sides commit to the transaction sooner — potentially once an offer is accepted — reducing the risk of a buyer or seller walking away late in the process without a valid reason, with a financial penalty for doing so. The Government has said this is a fundamental change and will not be introduced until upfront sales packs are well established, so that buyers are not bound before they have the key information about a property.
They may reduce the risk, but the detail will be important. Buyers and sellers should take legal advice before entering into any binding commitment, especially where penalties could apply for withdrawing from the transaction.
It is sensible to prepare early. Sellers can help avoid delays by instructing conveyancers promptly, gathering title documents, locating planning and building regulation certificates, preparing property information forms and requesting leasehold or management company information as soon as possible.
Buyers should review any upfront information carefully but should still obtain independent legal advice. A conveyancing solicitor can check the title, searches, leasehold position, contract terms and lender requirements before you become legally committed.
Yes. Burd Ward Solicitors assists clients with residential property sales, purchases, remortgages and transfers of equity across Wallasey, Wirral, Merseyside and beyond. Contact our conveyancing team to request a quote or a callback.