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How the Developer Snagging Rectification Process Works

How the Developer Snagging Rectification Process Works
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The Snagging Rectification Process Explained

You’ve completed your snagging inspection, compiled a detailed list of defects, and submitted it to your developer. Now what? The snagging rectification process is the procedure by which your developer acknowledges, schedules, and completes repairs to the defects you’ve identified. Understanding how this process works — and the timescales involved — is essential for getting your home brought up to the standard you paid for.

Every major UK housebuilder has a formal after-sales or customer care process, and the Consumer Code for Home Builders sets out minimum standards for how they should handle your complaints. However, the reality is that timescales and quality of repairs vary enormously between developers, and knowing your rights and the escalation routes available to you will help you navigate the process effectively.

14 days
Developer should acknowledge your snag list
30 days
Reasonable target for non-urgent repairs
2 years
Builder liability period under NHBC warranty

This guide walks through every stage of the process, from initial reporting to final verification, and explains what options you have if things go wrong along the way.

The Reporting Procedure: Getting It Right from Day One

How you report your snags sets the tone for the entire rectification process. A clear, well-documented report submitted through the correct channels will be taken more seriously and processed more efficiently than a vague phone call or casual conversation with a site worker.

Correct Reporting Procedure
1
Compile Your Snag List
Complete a thorough inspection using a snagging app or detailed written list. Each defect should have a description, location, and photograph.
2
Submit via Official Channels
Use the developer’s customer care portal, dedicated email address, or formal letter. Avoid verbal reports only — always have a written record.
3
Request Written Acknowledgement
Ask for confirmation that your report has been received and a reference number. This creates a paper trail for escalation if needed.
4
Prioritise Urgent Items
Flag any health or safety issues (faulty electrics, gas leaks, trip hazards) as urgent. These should be addressed within 24–48 hours.
5
Set a Response Deadline
Politely but firmly state that you expect acknowledgement within 14 days and a proposed rectification schedule within 28 days.

Most major developers now have online portals where you can log defects, upload photos, and track progress. If your developer has such a system, use it — but always keep your own records as well. Take screenshots of portal submissions and save email confirmations. If the developer only offers a phone number for after-sales, follow up any call with a confirming email summarising what was discussed.

Developer Response Timescales: What to Expect

The Consumer Code for Home Builders requires developers to have an accessible after-sales service and to deal with snags “within appropriate timescales.” However, the Code does not specify exact timescales for non-emergency items, which gives developers considerable latitude. Here are the general timescales you should expect and push for:

Expected Response Timescales by Defect Type
Emergency (safety)
24–48 hrs
Urgent (functional)
7 days
Standard (defect)
28–30 days
Cosmetic (minor)
30–60 days
Seasonal (settling)
3–12 months

Some defects genuinely cannot be fixed immediately. Hairline cracks from settlement are a good example — it makes sense to wait until the main settling period is over before filling and repainting, otherwise the crack will simply reappear. However, the developer should agree to this in writing and confirm when they will return to make the repair.

Be wary of developers who use “seasonal work” as an excuse to delay repairs indefinitely. While some items (like external paintwork) may need to wait for suitable weather, the majority of internal snags can be addressed at any time of year. If a developer is consistently missing timescales, document every missed commitment — this creates a strong evidence base for escalation.

Access Arrangements and Quality of Repairs

Once a repair date is agreed, the practical logistics of giving the developer access to your home begin. This can be one of the most frustrating aspects of the snagging process, particularly if you work full-time or if the developer’s tradespeople don’t show up as scheduled.

Your Rights on Access
NOTICE PERIOD
Reasonable (48 hrs+)
TIME WINDOW
Agreed AM/PM slot
IF THEY DON’T SHOW
Reschedule + log it
Common Access Frustrations
NO-SHOWS
Trades not arriving
VAGUE TIMING
“Sometime this week”
CLEANLINESS
Mess left behind

When giving access, you are entitled to:

  • Reasonable notice — at least 48 hours, preferably more
  • A specific time window — morning or afternoon at minimum; a 2-hour window is ideal
  • Clean working — tradespeople should protect your flooring and furnishings and clean up after themselves
  • Identification — all tradespeople entering your home should carry ID
  • You don’t have to leave — you are entitled to be present in your own home during repairs

After each repair visit, inspect the work before the tradesperson leaves if possible. If the repair is not to an acceptable standard — for example, paint touch-ups that don’t match, sealant that’s poorly applied, or a squeak that’s still present after a “fix” — raise it immediately and document the substandard work with photos.

Re-inspection: Checking the Repairs

Never assume a repair has been done properly just because the developer tells you it has. A structured re-inspection after each round of repairs is essential to verify that defects have actually been resolved to an acceptable standard.

🔍
Visual Inspection
Check paint match, sealant quality, tile alignment, and surface finish. Compare before and after photos from your snagging app.
🔨
Functional Testing
Test doors, windows, taps, electrics, and heating that were reported. A snag isn’t fixed if it still doesn’t function correctly.
📸
Document the Outcome
Photograph repaired areas. If acceptable, mark as closed. If not, log as a re-opened defect with new photos showing the issue.

Common problems with repair quality include:

  • Paint that doesn’t match — touch-ups using a different batch of paint or applied without proper preparation
  • Sealant over sealant — new sealant applied on top of old rather than removing and replacing
  • Cosmetic cover-ups — filling or painting over structural defects without addressing the root cause
  • New damage — tradespeople creating new defects while fixing existing ones (scuffed walls, dirty carpets)
  • Incomplete repairs — only part of the defect addressed, or finishing not completed

If you are not satisfied with the quality of a repair, you are within your rights to reject it and request it be done again properly. Document the issue, explain why it’s not acceptable, and ask for a return visit. Your NHBC warranty or equivalent covers defects, and a poor repair is still a defect.

Escalation Route: Site Manager to Customer Care to Warranty Provider

When the standard reporting process fails to produce results, knowing the correct escalation route is crucial. Most developers have a clear hierarchy for handling complaints, even if they don’t always make it obvious to buyers.

Escalation Ladder
1
Site Manager / After-Sales Team
Your first point of contact. The site team handles day-to-day snagging and coordinates tradespeople. Give them 14–28 days to respond.
2
Customer Care / Regional Manager
If the site team is unresponsive, escalate to the regional customer care manager. Request the name and contact details — they must provide them under the Consumer Code.
3
Managing Director / Head Office
For persistent issues, write to the MD of the regional division or the developer’s head office. A formal complaint letter often triggers action.
4
New Homes Quality Board (NHQB)
The independent body overseeing the New Homes Quality Code. They handle disputes where the developer has failed to meet Code requirements.
5
Warranty Provider (NHBC / LABC / Premier)
If the developer still refuses, your warranty provider can conduct their own inspection and, if the defects qualify, require the builder to act or arrange repairs directly.

At each escalation level, provide a clear, factual summary of the defects, when they were reported, what response (if any) you received, and what action you are requesting. Attaching your snagging report, photos, and a timeline of correspondence strengthens your position considerably.

Consumer Code Obligations and Developer Responsibilities

The Consumer Code for Home Builders (now superseded by the New Homes Quality Code for developers registered after 2023) sets out standards for how developers must handle after-sales issues. All major UK housebuilders are required to be registered with the Code as a condition of their NHBC or equivalent registration.

Key Developer Obligations Under the Code
Accessible after-sales serviceRequired
Timely response to complaintsRequired
Clear complaints procedureRequired
Dispute resolution mechanismRequired
Specific repair timescales in writingBest practice
Compensation for failuresCase-by-case

If your developer is a member of the Consumer Code or the New Homes Quality Code and you feel they have breached its requirements, you can file a complaint with the relevant adjudication body. This is an independent dispute resolution service that can award compensation and require the developer to carry out specific remedial work.

What If the Developer Refuses to Fix Defects?

In some cases, developers flat-out refuse to acknowledge or fix certain defects. Common excuses include claiming the issue is “within tolerance,” blaming the homeowner for causing the damage, or insisting the item was not included in the original specification. When this happens, you have several options.

📜
Independent Report
Commission a professional snagging survey (£300–£600). An independent expert’s report is hard for a developer to dismiss.
📧
Formal Complaint
Submit a formal written complaint to the developer’s head office referencing the Consumer Code. Keep copies of all correspondence.
Legal Action
As a last resort, you can pursue a claim through the Small Claims Court (up to £10,000) or instruct a solicitor for larger claims.

Before resorting to legal action, exhaust all other routes: the developer’s internal complaints process, the Consumer Code adjudication service, and your warranty provider’s resolution service. Each of these is faster and cheaper than court proceedings, and a ruling in your favour from any of these bodies strengthens your position if you do eventually need to take legal action.

For a complete overview of your warranty protections and how they interact with the snagging process, see our comprehensive snagging guide. Remember that the two-year builder liability period is a hard deadline — report all defects within this window, even if you agree with the developer to defer the actual repair to a later date. Getting the defect on record before the two-year mark protects your rights.

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