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New Build Contracts Decoded: Every Clause Explained, Red Flags to Spot, and What You Can Negotiate

New Build Contracts Decoded: Every Clause Explained, Red Flags to Spot, and What You Can Negotiate
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How a New Build Contract Differs from a Resale Contract

Before diving into specific clauses, it's important to understand the fundamental differences in structure and approach.

FeatureResale ContractNew Build Contract
BasisLaw Society Standard Conditions of Sale (5th edition)Developer's bespoke terms, often with standard conditions incorporated but heavily modified
Length15-30 pages including conditions50-150+ pages before attachments
BalanceBroadly balanced between buyer and sellerFavours the developer on most key terms
NegotiabilityMost terms open to negotiationLimited negotiability — developer uses the same contract for hundreds of plots
AttachmentsTitle documents, property forms, existing leaseSpecification, site plan, management company articles, Section 106, adoption agreements, warranty docs, draft lease, restrictive covenants schedule
Completion mechanismFixed date agreed by both partiesDeveloper gives notice when ready; buyer must comply within short timeframe
Drafting partySeller's solicitor, using standard templatesDeveloper's in-house legal team or specialist developer firm

For a full comparison of new build vs resale conveyancing at every stage, see our guide to how new build conveyancing differs from resale.

The Contract Pack: What You Should Receive

Your solicitor should receive a comprehensive contract pack from the developer's solicitors. Here's what it should contain and what each document is for:

DocumentWhat It ContainsWhat Your Solicitor Checks
Contract of saleThe main agreement: parties, property description, price, completion mechanism, special conditionsEvery clause — this is where the key risks and obligations sit
SpecificationMaterials, finishes, fixtures, fittings, appliances included in the purchaseCross-referenced against marketing materials, show-home, and any promises made by the sales team
Site plan / estate layoutPosition of your plot, roads, communal areas, parking, green spaces, future development phasesPlot boundaries, proximity to communal bins/substations/pumping stations, future phases that could affect your property
Title informationDeveloper's title to the land, any encumbrances, rights, and restrictionsDeveloper actually owns the land; no third-party interests that could affect your plot
Draft transfer deed (TR1)The document that will transfer ownership to youAll necessary rights of way and easements are included; all reservations by the developer are reasonable
Draft lease (leasehold only)Full terms of your leasehold interest: term, ground rent, service charges, permitted use, alterationsLease length (125+ years), ground rent (peppercorn post-June 2022), service charge reasonableness, restrictions on alterations
Management company documentsMemorandum and articles of association; initial management agreement; estimated budgetsWho controls the management company; how charges are set and reviewed; your voting rights; ability to change managing agent
Planning documentsPlanning permission, conditions, Section 106 / Section 75 agreementAll conditions discharged or programmed for discharge; no S106 restrictions that affect your plot specifically
Adoption agreementsSection 38 (roads) and Section 104 (sewers) agreements — or confirmation of statusWhether roads and sewers will be adopted; if not, who maintains them and at what cost to you
NHBC / warranty documentationType of warranty, cover periods, exclusions, claims processWarranty provider is acceptable to your lender; cover is in place from completion; you understand what's excluded
Energy Performance CertificateEPC rating (may be predicted for off-plan)Rating matches expectations; actual EPC will be provided before completion
Restrictive covenants scheduleThings you cannot do with the property or landCovenants are reasonable and won't affect your intended use or future resale

If any documents are missing or arrive late, that's a problem. Your solicitor cannot properly advise you without the complete pack, and the 28-day exchange deadline doesn't pause while you wait for missing documents.

Every Major Contract Clause Explained

Here is a clause-by-clause breakdown of the key terms in a typical new build contract.

1. The Parties and Property Description

This identifies the developer (seller) and you (buyer), and describes the property being sold. For new builds, the description often references a plot number on a site plan rather than a postal address (which may not exist yet).

What to check: The plot number matches what you reserved. The site plan shows the correct plot in the correct location. The description includes any garden, parking space, or storage that was part of the deal.

2. The Purchase Price and Deposit

States the agreed price and the deposit amount (usually 10% of the purchase price, payable on exchange).

ElementWhat's NormalWatch Out For
PriceFixed at the amount you agreedCheck for any price adjustment clauses (rare but possible for off-plan)
Deposit amount10% of the purchase priceSome contracts allow 5% on exchange with the balance on completion; developer contributions may reduce cash needed but the contractual deposit remains 10%
Deposit holderHeld by the developer's solicitorShould be held as 'stakeholder' (protected), not as 'agent' (developer can use it)
Deposit refundabilityRefundable if you rescind under the longstop date or developer breachesSome contracts make the deposit non-refundable in certain circumstances — your solicitor should challenge this

Stakeholder vs Agent: This is critical. If the deposit is held as 'stakeholder,' neither party can touch it until completion (or the contract is rescinded). If held as 'agent,' the developer can use your deposit money immediately — and if the developer goes into administration before completion, you may lose it. Always insist on stakeholder.

3. The Specification

The specification document describes exactly what you're buying: construction method, materials, fixtures, fittings, finishes, and appliances. It replaces the fixtures and fittings form (TA10) used in resale transactions.

What to check:

  • Does the specification match what you saw in the show-home? Show-homes often include upgrades that aren't standard
  • Are the exact brands and models specified, or just generic descriptions ('white goods' vs 'Bosch Serie 4 oven')?
  • Does the specification include the garden (landscaping, turf, fencing) or is that extra?
  • Are parking spaces numbered and allocated, or first-come-first-served?
  • What flooring is included? Many new builds come with bare concrete or chipboard to the first floor

4. The Variation Clause

This clause gives the developer the right to make changes to the property, the specification, or the estate layout without your consent. It is one of the most contentious clauses in new build contracts.

Variation TypeWhat the Developer Typically ClaimsWhat Your Solicitor Should Push For
Materials substitutionRight to substitute 'equivalent' materialsDefinition of 'equivalent' — must be same quality and specification, not just same price to the developer
Layout changesRight to alter internal layout if necessaryAny layout change that reduces floor area or changes room configuration requires your written consent
Estate plan changesRight to alter roads, communal areas, landscaping, and add/remove plotsChanges that materially affect your plot (views, privacy, access, parking) require consent or give you right to rescind
External appearanceRight to change external materials (bricks, render, roof tiles)External changes that differ materially from marketing images should require consent
ServicesRight to change the route or specification of services (drainage, electricity, gas)Services must still meet building regulations and not adversely affect your plot

Red flag: A variation clause with no limits and no definition of 'minor' gives the developer carte blanche to deliver something different from what you bought. Push for a 'material change' threshold that triggers either your consent or a right to rescind with a full deposit refund.

5. The Completion Mechanism

This is where new build contracts diverge most dramatically from resale. Instead of agreeing a fixed completion date, the contract establishes a mechanism by which the developer triggers completion.

MechanismHow It WorksWhat to Negotiate
Notice to completeDeveloper serves written notice when the property is ready; you must complete within the notice periodMinimum 14 days' notice (21 preferred); notice must be served by recorded delivery, not just email
Estimated completion dateAn indicative date in the contract — not binding, just a guideGet the most realistic date possible; ask what stage the build is at and what could delay it
Conditions precedentCompletion conditional on building control sign-off, NHBC cover note, and sometimes planning conditions being dischargedAll conditions should be genuinely achievable; if any are outside the developer's control, understand the risk
Penalty for late buyer completionDaily interest charged to you (typically contract rate + 4% over base rate) if you don't complete within the notice periodEnsure the interest rate is reasonable; push for a reciprocal clause penalising the developer for late build

The asymmetry problem: In most new build contracts, if you're late completing, you pay daily penalty interest. If the developer is late building, you wait — with no compensation and no right to claim damages for wasted mortgage offer fees, additional rent, or storage costs. Your solicitor should negotiate to reduce this asymmetry where possible.

6. The Longstop Date

The longstop date is a contractual backstop — a deadline by which the developer must complete the build and trigger the completion process. If the developer hasn't completed by this date, you (usually) have the right to rescind the contract and get your deposit back.

ElementWhat's NormalRed Flag
ExistenceEvery contract should have a longstop dateNo longstop date — you're locked in indefinitely with no exit
Length12-24 months from exchangeOver 24 months (unless the build is genuinely very early stage)
TriggerYou serve notice after the longstop date passes; deposit is refundedDeveloper can extend the longstop date unilaterally — removes the protection entirely
Deposit returnFull deposit refunded if you rescind under the longstop provisionDeposit is non-refundable even on longstop rescission — this is unacceptable
CompensationDeposit refund only — no compensation for wasted costsThis is standard but unsatisfying; some solicitors negotiate a modest compensation clause (typically unsuccessful)

Critical point: Without a longstop date, you have exchanged contracts and paid a deposit on a property that the developer has no contractual deadline to finish. Your mortgage offer will expire, your life circumstances will change, and you'll have no legal way out. Never exchange without a longstop date.

7. Restrictive Covenants

Restrictive covenants are obligations imposed on you that restrict how you can use the property. On new build estates, these are typically imposed by the developer to maintain the estate's appearance and protect property values — but some go further than necessary.

Common CovenantPurposeReasonable?
No commercial usePrevents running a business from the property that would cause disturbanceGenerally reasonable, but check it doesn't prevent working from home
No external alterations without consentPrevents unsightly additions that lower estate valuesReasonable if consent is not unreasonably withheld; check who gives consent
No caravans, boats, or commercial vehicles on the driveEstate appearanceCommon; may be inconvenient if you have a work van
Fencing and boundary restrictionsUniformity of appearanceCheck what you're actually allowed to put up; some covenants are very restrictive
No satellite dishes on front elevationEstate appearanceGenerally reasonable; may conflict with your right to install a dish under telecoms regulations
No subletting without consentKeeps the estate owner-occupiedCould prevent you letting the property if circumstances change; may affect buy-to-let mortgage eligibility
Landscaping maintenance obligationYou must maintain your garden to a certain standardSubjective and hard to enforce, but could be used against you in a dispute
No further developmentPrevents you extending or building additional structuresCould prevent a loft conversion, extension, or garden room — check carefully

Who enforces covenants? Usually the developer or the management company. Some covenants also give neighbouring plot owners the right to enforce. This matters because the developer eventually leaves the estate, but the covenants stay.

Can you remove covenants later? It's possible through a Lands Tribunal (Upper Tribunal, Lands Chamber) application under Section 84 of the Law of Property Act 1925, but it's expensive (£1,000-£5,000+), time-consuming, and not guaranteed to succeed.

8. The Developer's Obligations

The contract should clearly state what the developer is obligated to deliver and to what standard.

ObligationWhat It Should SayWhat to Check
Build standardBuilt in accordance with planning permission, building regulations, and NHBC standardsAll three are mentioned — not just 'in a good and workmanlike manner' (too vague)
Specification complianceProperty will be built in accordance with the specificationSubject to the variation clause — see above for how to limit the developer's variation rights
Completion standardProperty will be 'practically complete' before triggering completionDefinition of 'practically complete' — does it mean everything done, or just habitable with minor items outstanding?
Defects liabilityDeveloper will rectify defects reported within 2 years of completionEnsure the defects period is explicitly stated; check what's excluded (cosmetic wear and tear usually excluded)
NHBC warrantyProperty will be registered with NHBC or equivalent warranty providerRegistration confirmed before completion; cover note provided; you understand the claims process
Communal areasCommunal roads, landscaping, and facilities will be completed to an agreed standardTimescale for communal areas completion; who is responsible if the developer leaves the estate before finishing them

9. The Buyer's Obligations

Your obligations under the contract are also significant:

  • Pay the deposit on exchange: Usually 10%, cleared funds, on the day of exchange
  • Complete within the notice period: Once the developer serves notice, you must complete or face penalty interest
  • Obtain mortgage funding: The contract is not conditional on mortgage approval — if your mortgage falls through, you're still contractually bound
  • Pay stamp duty: Within 14 days of completion
  • Comply with restrictive covenants: From the date of completion onwards
  • Join the management company: If applicable, you're automatically a member from completion
  • Not visit the site without permission: Most contracts prohibit you from visiting the construction site during the build without the developer's consent

10. Incentives and Extras

Developer incentives — flooring packages, stamp duty contributions, deposit contributions, upgraded kitchens, part-exchange deals — must be properly documented in the contract.

Incentive TypeHow It Should Be DocumentedWhy It Matters
Financial contribution (stamp duty, deposit, legal fees)Written into a special condition of the contract with the exact amount specifiedMust be disclosed to your mortgage lender; affects the effective purchase price and valuation
Physical extras (flooring, appliances, curtains)Added to the specification document with exact descriptionsWithout written confirmation, the developer can claim it was never agreed
Part-exchangeSeparate part-exchange agreement cross-referenced in the main contractCheck the part-exchange valuation is fair; understand the implications if either sale falls through
Rental guaranteeSeparate rental guarantee agreement with terms, duration, and rent level specifiedUsually aimed at investors; check who provides the guarantee (developer or third party) and what happens when it ends

The golden rule: If it's not in writing in the contract or specification, it doesn't exist. Verbal promises from the sales office are worthless once contracts are exchanged. Get everything in writing before you sign.

11. Stamp Duty and Apportionment

For new build purchases, stamp duty (SDLT in England and Northern Ireland, LBTT in Scotland, LTT in Wales) is calculated on the full purchase price. However, if incentives reduce the effective price, the position becomes more complex.

Your solicitor must correctly apportion any incentives for the SDLT return. Getting this wrong can result in HMRC penalties. For current rates and how incentives affect the calculation, see our deposit guide which includes a full stamp duty reference table.

12. The Transfer Deed (TR1)

The TR1 is the document that legally transfers ownership of the property from the developer to you. For new builds, it's more complex than a standard resale transfer because it:

  • Creates new rights of way, drainage easements, and service easements for the first time
  • Reserves rights for the developer over your land (access to maintain services, rights to complete future phases)
  • Imposes the restrictive covenants that will bind you and future owners
  • Defines the boundaries of your plot from the developer's master title

Your solicitor should review the TR1 with extreme care. Errors in the transfer deed are expensive and time-consuming to correct through the Land Registry, and may require the developer's cooperation — which becomes difficult once they've moved on to new projects.

Red Flags: When to Be Seriously Concerned

These are contract provisions that should raise alarm and may justify walking away from the purchase entirely.

Red FlagRisk LevelWhat It MeansAction
No longstop dateCriticalYou're locked in indefinitely with no exit if the developer doesn't buildRefuse to exchange without a longstop date being added
Deposit held as 'agent' not 'stakeholder'CriticalDeveloper can spend your deposit immediately; you're an unsecured creditor if they go bustInsist on stakeholder; if developer refuses, walk away
Doubling ground rent (pre-June 2022 lease)CriticalProperty will become unmortgageable within 10-20 yearsRefuse the clause; if the lease is post-June 2022, ground rent should be peppercorn by law
No defects liability periodHighDeveloper has no obligation to fix defects after you completeInsist on minimum 2-year defects liability period
Unlimited variation clauseHighDeveloper can deliver something materially different from what you agreed to buyNegotiate limits; insist on consent for material changes
Completion notice under 10 daysHighMay not have enough time to arrange mortgage drawdownNegotiate minimum 14-day notice; 21 days is better
Developer can extend longstop unilaterallyHighLongstop date is meaningless if the developer can keep pushing it backReject; longstop should be fixed or extendable only by mutual agreement
Overage clause with unreasonable termsMediumDeveloper shares in any future uplift if you develop the land furtherAssess whether this could realistically affect you; negotiate removal or reasonable time limit
No reciprocal penalties for developer delayMediumYou pay interest for being late; developer pays nothing for delaying the build by yearsPush for reciprocal provisions; likely to be rejected but worth raising
Mandatory arbitration (not litigation)MediumYou can't go to court if there's a dispute; must use arbitration which can be expensiveCheck whether the Consumer Code provides an alternative complaints route first

What You Can Realistically Negotiate

Developers use the same contract for every plot on the estate, and they're reluctant to make changes because it creates inconsistency and requires legal review. But that doesn't mean negotiation is impossible. Here's what's realistic:

ClauseLikelihood of SuccessNegotiation Strategy
Deposit held as stakeholderHighStandard consumer protection expectation; most developers will agree if pushed
Minimum completion notice period (14-21 days)HighReasonable request backed by practical need to arrange mortgage drawdown
Incentives written into contractHighDeveloper wants the sale; documenting agreed incentives is a reasonable ask
Longstop date added (if missing)HighConsumer Code for Home Builders expects a longstop date; solicitors routinely insist on this
Defects liability period confirmedHighMost major developers include 2 years as standard; if missing, insist on it
Variation clause limitationsMediumDeveloper may agree to a 'material change' threshold; unlikely to remove the clause entirely
Restrictive covenant modificationsLow-MediumDeveloper may soften individual covenants if they're clearly unreasonable
Reciprocal delay penaltiesLowWorth raising on principle; developer almost always refuses
Price reductionLowDevelopers prefer to offer incentives rather than reduce the headline price (affects comparable valuations)
Longstop date shortenedLowDeveloper sets the longstop based on build programme; unlikely to accept a shorter period

How to Negotiate Effectively

  • Through your solicitor: All contract negotiations should go through your solicitor to the developer's solicitor. Don't negotiate directly with the sales office on legal terms
  • In writing: Every amendment must be documented in a formal enquiry letter or contract amendment schedule
  • Early in the process: Raise issues as soon as the contract pack is reviewed, not the day before exchange
  • Pick your battles: Requesting 20 amendments will get you nowhere. Focus on the issues that genuinely matter: stakeholder deposit, longstop date, completion notice period, defects liability
  • Reference the Consumer Code: The Consumer Code for Home Builders (2024 edition) sets expectations for fair dealing. Referencing it gives your negotiation points legitimacy

The Consumer Code for Home Builders

The Consumer Code is a mandatory code of conduct for developers registered with NHBC, Premier Guarantee, LABC Warranty, and other warranty providers. While it's not legislation, it sets enforceable standards that your solicitor can reference.

Code RequirementWhat It Means for You
Pre-purchase informationDeveloper must provide clear, accurate information about the property, price, tenure, and any charges before you reserve
Reservation agreementMust set out terms clearly; reservation fee should be reimbursed if the developer withdraws the property or fails to provide the contract pack in time
Contract termsMust be fair, clear, and comply with consumer protection legislation
Right to independent legal adviceDeveloper must not pressure you to use their recommended solicitor
Build qualityProperty must be built to NHBC or equivalent standards
After-sales serviceDeveloper must provide an accessible after-sales service and a formal complaints process
Dispute resolutionIndependent dispute resolution scheme available if you can't resolve issues directly with the developer

If the developer breaches the Consumer Code, you can raise a complaint through the code's independent dispute resolution scheme. This is separate from — and often quicker than — court proceedings.

Leasehold-Specific Contract Terms

If you're buying a leasehold new build (most flats, some houses), the contract will include or reference a draft lease that contains additional terms. These lease terms are separate from the contract of sale but equally important.

Key Lease Terms to Check

Lease TermWhat to Look ForRed Flag
Lease length125 years minimum; 999 years increasingly commonAnything under 125 years — shorter leases lose value faster and become expensive to extend
Ground rentPeppercorn (zero) for leases granted on or after 30 June 2022Any ground rent above peppercorn on a post-June 2022 lease is illegal. For earlier leases: doubling clauses, RPI-linked escalation, or anything above £250/year
Service chargeReasonable estimate with clear breakdown of what's coveredNo estimate provided; vague 'to be determined' wording; no cap on annual increases
Reserve / sinking fundContribution to a fund for major future works (roof, lift, communal heating)No reserve fund provision — means large one-off bills when major works are needed
ManagementRight to appoint and change managing agentDeveloper retains permanent management control with no tenant ability to change
AlterationsReasonable consent process for internal alterationsBlanket prohibition on all alterations, or consent required for even minor works
SublettingPermitted with notice (or permitted at all)Complete prohibition on subletting — removes flexibility if you need to relocate
InsuranceBuilding insurance arranged by the freeholder; you contribute proportionallyNo transparency on insurance costs; freeholder earns commission on the policy (common but should be disclosed)
ForfeitureLease can be forfeited (ended) if you breach its terms seriouslyLow thresholds for forfeiture — ensure you understand what could trigger it

Ground Rent: The Legal Position

The Leasehold Reform (Ground Rent) Act 2022 fundamentally changed ground rent for new leases:

Lease GrantedGround Rent Position
Before 30 June 2022Whatever the lease says — could be fixed, RPI-linked, or doubling. Original terms apply
On or after 30 June 2022Must be peppercorn (zero). Any clause requiring payment above zero is void

If you're buying on a development where earlier phases had leases granted before June 2022, those earlier-phase flats may have different (potentially problematic) ground rent terms. This doesn't affect your lease directly, but it's worth understanding the context of the development.

For more on service charges, management, and the Leasehold and Freehold Reform Act 2024, see our service charges guide.

Off-Plan Contracts: Additional Risks

If you're buying off-plan (before the property is built), the contract carries additional risks compared to buying a completed or nearly completed property.

RiskWhat Could HappenProtection
Build delaysProperty not ready for months or years beyond the estimated dateLongstop date gives you an exit; keep mortgage offer alive with extensions
Specification changesDeveloper substitutes materials, changes layout, or downgrades finishesVariation clause limitations; written specification in the contract
Developer insolvencyDeveloper goes into administration before completing the buildDeposit held as stakeholder; NHBC pre-completion cover (for registered plots); don't over-pay before completion
Market fallsProperty value drops below purchase price before completionNo direct protection — you're contractually committed to complete at the agreed price
Market risesDeveloper may try to find reasons to avoid completing (very rare but not unheard of)Exchanged contract is legally binding; your solicitor can enforce completion
Mortgage offer expiryOffer expires before the property is readyApply for extension early; have a backup plan for re-application
Planning changesDeveloper gets permission for additional buildings or changes to the estate that affect your propertyCheck the outline planning permission for future phases; understand what the developer could still build

NHBC Pre-Completion Cover

If the developer goes into administration after you've exchanged but before completion, the NHBC Buildmark warranty provides pre-completion cover. This can refund your deposit (up to £100,000 for a house, £100,000 for a flat) if the developer can't complete. However, this only applies if your plot was registered with NHBC before exchange. Check with your solicitor that NHBC registration is confirmed before you exchange.

Special Conditions: The Developer's Custom Clauses

Beyond the standard structure, new build contracts include 'special conditions' — custom clauses added by the developer. These are where the most significant traps often hide.

Common Special ConditionWhat It DoesConcern Level
Prohibition on assignmentYou cannot sell (assign) the contract to another buyer before completionMedium — prevents flipping off-plan purchases, but also traps you if your circumstances change
No set-offYou cannot reduce the purchase price to reflect defects or incomplete works at completionHigh — you must complete at full price even if the property has obvious problems; your remedy is post-completion claims only
Limit on pre-completion inspectionsYou may only inspect the property once before completion (or not at all until the snagging appointment)Medium — limits your ability to identify problems before committing
Contribution to communal worksYou must pay a share of future communal infrastructure costs if the local authority doesn't adopt themMedium-High — open-ended financial commitment; check what the potential costs could be
Access reservationDeveloper retains right to access your property to complete works on adjacent plots or communal areasLow-Medium — reasonable during the construction phase but should have a time limit
Dispute resolution clauseSpecifies how disputes are resolved (mediation, arbitration, or court)Low — check whether it limits your right to go to court; ensure the Consumer Code dispute route is preserved

What Happens If Things Go Wrong

Understanding your remedies before you sign helps you assess the risk of the contract.

ProblemYour RemedyPractical Reality
Developer doesn't complete by the longstop dateRescind the contract; deposit refundedYou get your deposit back but lose time, mortgage arrangement fees, and solicitor costs with no compensation
Property doesn't match the specificationClaim for breach of contract; damages for the cost of correcting the deficiencyMay need to go to court or arbitration; developer may dispute what 'equivalent' means under the variation clause
Defects discovered after completionReport to developer under the defects liability period (first 2 years); then NHBC warranty (years 3-10)Developer defects process varies hugely in quality; NHBC claims can be slow and contentious
Developer goes into administrationNHBC pre-completion cover (deposit refund up to limits); unsecured creditor for anything aboveYou may get your deposit back but will need to find another property; any additional losses are unlikely to be recovered
You can't complete (mortgage falls through)Developer can rescind and keep your depositYou lose 10% of the purchase price — potentially £20,000-£50,000+
Communal areas never completedClaim against developer; pressure through management companyIf developer has dissolved the company or moved on, enforcement is difficult and expensive
Roads and sewers never adoptedBond against the developer (if one was in place); or residents pay for maintenanceAdoption can take 2-5+ years; bond enforcement is complex; you may be paying estate charges indefinitely

Contract Review Checklist

Use this checklist to ensure your solicitor has covered every critical point before you exchange contracts:

Before Exchange

  • Full contract pack received and reviewed — no missing documents
  • Specification cross-referenced against marketing materials and show-home
  • All agreed incentives written into the contract or specification
  • Deposit to be held as stakeholder (not agent)
  • Longstop date exists and is reasonable
  • Completion notice period is at least 14 days (ideally 21)
  • Variation clause has defined limits
  • Defects liability period confirmed (minimum 2 years)
  • NHBC or equivalent warranty registration confirmed
  • Ground rent is peppercorn (for leases post-June 2022) or acceptable and not doubling
  • Service charge estimate provided and seems reasonable
  • Management company structure understood and voting rights confirmed
  • Road adoption (Section 38) and sewer adoption (Section 104) status checked
  • Planning conditions reviewed; no outstanding conditions that could affect you
  • Section 106 / Section 75 obligations don't restrict your plot
  • Restrictive covenants reviewed and acceptable
  • Transfer deed (TR1) checked for proper rights and reasonable reservations
  • Searches completed and results satisfactory
  • Mortgage offer in place and valid for sufficient period
  • All developer incentives disclosed to mortgage lender

At Exchange

  • Contract signed by you and returned to your solicitor
  • Deposit funds transferred (cleared funds required)
  • Exchange confirmed by both solicitors (usually by telephone)
  • Insurance noted (buildings insurance typically the developer's responsibility until completion)
  • You understand the completion mechanism and notice period

After Exchange, Before Completion

  • Mortgage offer remains valid (extend if necessary)
  • Snagging inspection booked or planned
  • Removal firm on standby for short-notice completion
  • Solicitor monitoring build progress and liaising with developer's solicitors
  • Stamp duty calculation prepared

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I pull out after exchanging contracts?

Only in very limited circumstances. If the developer breaches the contract, fails to complete by the longstop date, or makes a material change that triggers your right to rescind, you can pull out and (usually) get your deposit back. If you simply change your mind or your mortgage falls through, you cannot pull out without losing your deposit — and the developer may also pursue you for additional damages.

What if the developer goes bankrupt?

If the developer enters administration before completion, your deposit should be protected if it's held as stakeholder by the solicitor. NHBC Buildmark also provides pre-completion cover that can reimburse your deposit up to £100,000. However, any other losses (solicitor fees, mortgage costs, price differences on an alternative property) are unlikely to be recovered.

Can my solicitor force the developer to change the contract?

No. Contract negotiation is a request, not a demand. The developer can refuse any amendment. However, on key consumer protection points (stakeholder deposit, longstop date, defects liability), most developers will agree because refusing creates legal risk and bad publicity. Your solicitor should raise concerns through formal enquiries and proposed amendments.

Should I read the whole contract myself?

Your solicitor should review the entire contract and provide a report on title explaining the key terms and any concerns. You don't need to read every clause yourself, but you should read your solicitor's report carefully and ask questions about anything you don't understand. Pay particular attention to the specification, restrictive covenants, and any financial obligations.

What if the developer pressures me to exchange quickly?

The 28-day exchange deadline in the reservation agreement creates legitimate time pressure, but your solicitor should not rush the review to meet an arbitrary deadline. If the contract pack arrives late or there are genuine concerns that need resolution, a competent solicitor will manage the developer's expectations and request an extension. If the developer refuses any extension, that itself is a warning sign. For more on this, see our reservation fees guide.

Is the contract the same for every buyer on the estate?

The core contract and general conditions are usually identical for every plot. Individual variations may include: plot-specific restrictive covenants, different prices, different incentives, and specific conditions relating to the particular plot (e.g., a plot next to a pumping station may have specific noise/odour warnings). Your solicitor should check whether any plot-specific conditions apply.

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