How Long Does Conveyancing Take? (2026 UK Guide)

Last updated: March 2026 | Fact-checked by NPS Law Solicitors

📋 Key Points

Solicitor fees for buying a house typically range from £500–£1,500 in legal fees, plus disbursements of £400–£1,200 — totalling £1,000–£3,000 for most standard transactions.

Solicitor fees for selling a house are generally lower: legal fees of £350–£1,200, with fewer disbursements required.

Buying and selling simultaneously means two separate fee sets — expect a combined total of £2,000–£5,000.

Disbursements (searches, Land Registry, Stamp Duty) are charged on top of legal fees and vary significantly by property and location.

No Move, No Fee protects your legal fee — but does NOT cover disbursements already incurred.

Always ask for a fully itemised, fixed-fee quote including VAT and disbursements before instructing any solicitor.

NPS Law offers transparent, fixed-fee conveyancing with no hidden charges. Request a quote today.

Why Solicitor Fees Catch So Many People Off Guard

Moving house is one of the most expensive things you will ever do — and solicitor fees are often the cost that surprises people most. You budget carefully for the deposit, the mortgage, and the removal van. Then the legal bill arrives and it is bigger than you expected.

The reason is simple: ‘solicitor fees’ is not one number. It is your solicitor’s professional charge, plus a collection of third-party costs called disbursements. Whether you are buying, selling, or doing both at once, these costs add up quickly — and they vary significantly depending on your property’s value, tenure, and complexity.

This guide breaks down every fee you are likely to encounter in 2026: what it is, who it goes to, and how much to expect. Whether you are a first-time buyer, a home mover, a landlord, or an executor selling a probate property, this guide answers your specific questions.

1. What Are Solicitor Fees and What Do They Cover?

When people talk about ‘solicitor fees’ for a property transaction, they are actually referring to two distinct components that appear as separate line items on your bill:

ComponentWhat It IsWho Receives It
Legal FeesYour solicitor's professional charge for managing the entire conveyancing process — reviewing contracts, raising enquiries, handling funds, registering ownership.Your solicitor or licensed conveyancer
DisbursementsThird-party costs paid on your behalf — searches, Land Registry fees, Stamp Duty, identity checks.Third parties: HMRC, Land Registry, local councils
VAT20% VAT applies to the solicitor's legal fees. It does not apply to most disbursements.HMRC

Always ask any solicitor you are considering whether their quoted price includes VAT and disbursements. A low headline fee can increase significantly once these are added. The total cost is what matters.

FACT-CHECKED: Licensed conveyancers vs solicitors

Both are regulated professionals who can handle residential conveyancing. Licensed conveyancers specialise exclusively in property law (regulated by the CLC) and are often cheaper. Solicitors offer a full range of legal services (regulated by the SRA) and may be preferable for complex transactions involving boundary disputes, unusual title issues, or commercial elements.

2. Solicitor Fees for Buying a House — Full Breakdown

Buying involves more legal complexity than selling, because your solicitor must investigate the property’s title, order searches, review the contract pack, and act for your mortgage lender as well as you. This is reflected in the fee.

Legal Fees When Buying — By Property Price and Type

Legal fees (excluding VAT and disbursements) typically scale with property value and complexity:

Property PriceFreeholdLeaseholdNew Build
Up to £150,000£450–£600£600–£850£650–£900
£150,001–£250,000£600–£800£800–£1,050£900–£1,200
£250,001–£400,000£750–£1,000£950–£1,300£1,100–£1,500
£400,001–£600,000£950–£1,300£1,200–£1,700£1,400–£2,000
£600,001–£1,000,000£1,200–£1,800£1,600–£2,300£1,800–£2,800
Over £1,000,000£1,800+£2,300+£2,800+

All figures are indicative estimates excluding VAT and disbursements. Actual quotes vary by firm and transaction complexity.

Additional Legal Fees When Buying
CircumstanceWhy It Costs MoreTypical Additional Fee
Leasehold supplementReviewing lease, service charge accounts, freeholder enquiries£200–£400
New build supplementReviewing planning documents, roads, sewers, developer contract£200–£500
Shared OwnershipAdditional housing association documentation and requirements£300–£500
Mortgage handling feeActing for lender as well as buyer (often included in base fee)£0–£200
Gifted depositAnti-money laundering checks on the donor£50–£150
Help to Buy / Lifetime ISARedeeming the government bonus£60–£100
Unregistered propertyFirst registration at Land Registry requires extra work£150–£300

[INFOGRAPHIC PLACEHOLDER]

Infographic: What your solicitor does at each stage when buying a house — from offer accepted through searches, exchange, and completion

Ready to get a quote for your purchase?

NPS Law provides fixed-fee conveyancing with no hidden extras. Whether you are buying freehold, leasehold, or a new build, we will give you a clear, itemised quote upfront. Call us or use our online enquiry form to get started.

3. Solicitor Fees for Selling a House — Full Breakdown

Selling is generally less complex than buying: your solicitor prepares the contract pack, responds to buyer enquiries, and handles the transfer of funds. There are also fewer disbursements on the seller’s side. However, selling a leasehold property involves additional obligations and costs.

Legal Fees When Selling — By Property Price
Property PriceFreeholdLeasehold
Up to £150,000£350–£550£550–£750
£150,001–£250,000£500–£700£700–£950
£250,001–£400,000£650–£900£900–£1,200
£400,001–£600,000£850–£1,150£1,100–£1,500
£600,001–£1,000,000£1,100–£1,600£1,400–£2,000
Over £1,000,000£1,600+£2,000+

Indicative estimates excluding VAT.

Disbursements When Selling
DisbursementWhat It's ForTypical Cost
Official copies of titleObtaining the title deeds from Land Registry£6–£15
Bank transfer (TT) feeTransferring completion funds to your bank account£20–£40
Anti-money laundering checksIdentity verification on all sellers£6–£20 per person
Leasehold management pack (LPE1)Information pack from freeholder/management company — sellers pay this£300–£800
EPC (if no valid certificate)Required by law if no valid EPC exists on the property£60–£120

WARNING: Sellers of leasehold properties: the management pack (LPE1) is typically £300–£800, charged directly by your freeholder or managing agent — not your solicitor. This is one of the most commonly forgotten costs when budgeting for a leasehold sale. Request the fee from your managing agent before you put the property on the market.

Selling your home? Get a clear, fixed quote.

NPS Law handles leasehold and freehold sales across England and Wales. We prepare your contract pack, handle the management pack process, and keep buyers’ solicitors moving. Contact us for a no-obligation quote.

4. Buying and Selling at the Same Time — Combined Fee Breakdown

Most home movers are doing both: selling their current property and buying a new one simultaneously. This means two sets of fees — but many firms offer a discount for instructing them for both transactions at once.

Example Combined Cost Scenarios
ScenarioSale FeesPurchase FeesDisbursementsEst. Total
Selling £250k FH, buying £350k FH£550–£700£750–£1,000£800–£1,200£2,100–£2,900
Selling £300k LH, buying £450k FH£800–£1,000£900–£1,200£1,100–£1,600£2,800–£3,800
Selling £500k FH, buying £700k new build£900–£1,150£1,500–£2,000£1,200–£1,800£3,600–£4,950
Selling £400k FH, buying £550k LH flat£800–£1,100£1,200–£1,600£1,000–£1,500£3,000–£4,200

FH = Freehold, LH = Leasehold. Figures include VAT estimates but exclude Stamp Duty Land Tax, which is calculated separately based on your specific purchase price and circumstances.

Always ask specifically whether a combined sale and purchase discount is available. Many firms, including NPS Law, offer a reduced combined rate rather than two separate full fees.

[INFOGRAPHIC PLACEHOLDER]

Infographic: How a simultaneous sale and purchase works — parallel timelines, chain dependencies, and why using one solicitor for both saves time and reduces risk

5. What Are Disbursements? The Hidden Costs Explained

Disbursements are third-party costs that your solicitor pays on your behalf. They are not the solicitor’s profit — they are passed through at cost. However, on a purchase, they can add £600–£1,500 to your total legal bill, so budgeting for them properly is essential.

Buyer Disbursements — Full List
DisbursementWhat It's ForWhen PaidTypical Cost
Local authority searchChecks planning matters, road schemes, enforcement noticesBefore exchange£100–£450
Water and drainage searchConfirms mains water/sewer connection and flooding riskBefore exchange£30–£60
Environmental searchIdentifies contaminated land, flood zones, subsidence riskBefore exchange£35–£80
Land Registry registration feeFee to register you as new owner — scales with property valueOn completion£20–£910
Land Registry searchOfficial copy of title register before completionBefore completion£3–£7
Bankruptcy searchRequired by lender to confirm buyer is not bankruptBefore exchange£2–£4 per person
Anti-money laundering checksIdentity verification on all buyersOn instruction£6–£20 per person
Bank transfer (TT) feeTransfer of completion funds to seller's solicitorOn completion£20–£40
Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT)Tax on property purchase — varies by price, buyer type, and property typeOn completion£0–£100,000+
Property fraud checkVerifies the bank account you are sending money to is legitimateBefore completion£10–£20

FACT-CHECKED: Land Registry Fees (2026)

Land Registry registration fees are set by the government on a sliding scale. For a £250,000 property: £135. For £500,000: £270. For £1,000,000: £455. These are set by the Land Registration Fee Order 2013 (as amended). Source: gov.uk/guidance/hm-land-registry-registration-services-fees

[INFOGRAPHIC PLACEHOLDER]

Infographic: Pie chart showing proportional breakdown of typical buyer disbursements on a £300,000 freehold purchase

6. No Move, No Fee — What It Actually Covers (and What It Doesn't)

‘No Move, No Fee’ (also called ‘No Sale, No Fee’) is a guarantee offered by many conveyancing firms. If your transaction falls through before completion, you do not pay your solicitor’s legal fee. It sounds like a full safety net. But the limitations are significant.

What No Move, No Fee Typically Covers
  • The solicitor’s professional legal fee — their time charges for the work carried out to date
  • Initial document preparation, contract review, and correspondence

 

What No Move, No Fee Does NOT Cover
  • Disbursements already incurred — searches, AML checks, Land Registry fees once paid are gone
  • Leasehold management pack fees — charged by your freeholder and non-refundable
  • Survey fees, mortgage valuation fees, or broker fees
  • Any upfront ‘file opening’ or ‘admin’ fees some firms charge on instruction
Cost ItemWith No Move No FeeWithout No Move No Fee
Solicitor's legal fee (e.g. £800)WaivedYou pay £800
Local authority search (£200)You pay £200You pay £200
Water/environmental searches (£80)You pay £80You pay £80
AML and Land Registry fees (£50)You pay £50You pay £50
Total potential loss~£330 (disbursements only)~£1,130+ total

WARNING

Around 1 in 3 property purchases fall through in England and Wales. No Move, No Fee can save you the legal fee — but you will still lose disbursements already paid. Always ask your solicitor for a clear written explanation of exactly what their guarantee covers before instructing

7. How Much Should You Pay? Red Flags in Cheap Quotes

The cheapest solicitor is rarely the best value. In property transactions, a slow or inexperienced conveyancer can cost you far more through delayed completions, fallen chains, and missed issues than the difference between a £700 and a £1,100 quote.

That said, you absolutely should compare quotes. Here is how to do it properly, and what to watch for.

How to Compare Quotes Properly
  • Request a fully itemised quote separating legal fees, disbursements, and VAT
  • Confirm the quote is fixed fee — not an estimate that can increase mid-transaction
  • Check whether the quote includes acting for your mortgage lender (required for most purchases)
  • Ask whether No Move, No Fee is included and what it specifically covers
  • Read recent reviews for content — responsiveness and communication matter as much as price
Red Flags in Low Quotes
Red FlagWhat It Often Means
Very low headline fee (under £400)Likely to recoup through add-on charges, or extremely high caseloads with poor responsiveness
Disbursements listed as 'TBC' or 'estimated'You may face unexpected costs mid-transaction with no straightforward way out
No SRA or CLC registration mentionedAll conveyancers must be regulated — verify on sra.org.uk or clc-uk.org before instructing
Estate agent recommendation without shopping aroundAgents often receive referral fees — the recommended firm may not offer the best value
No named solicitor or single point of contactFactory-style operations pass files between staff — expect delays and repeated explanations
Vague about leasehold or new build experienceThese transactions require specialist knowledge — a generalist can miss critical issues

FACT-CHECKED: Regulatory verification

All solicitors in England and Wales must be regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA). Licensed conveyancers are regulated by the Council for Licensed Conveyancers (CLC). Verify any firm before instructing at sra.org.uk or clc-uk.org.

Want a quote that covers everything — with nothing hidden?

NPS Law provides fully itemised, fixed-fee quotes. We are SRA-regulated, and our team has handled thousands of residential transactions across England and Wales. Contact us for your tailored quote today.

8. Your Situation: Fees by Life Stage

The right question is not just ‘how much are solicitor fees?’ — it is ‘how much will they be for my specific situation?’ Here is what you need to know based on where you are in life.

First-Time Buyers

As a first-time buyer, you are only purchasing — not selling — which reduces the overall cost. You may also benefit from Stamp Duty relief: in England, first-time buyers pay no SDLT on properties up to £300,000, and a reduced rate up to £500,000. Check the latest thresholds at gov.uk as these are subject to change.

  • Legal fees: typically £500–£900 for a standard freehold purchase
  • Disbursements: £400–£900 depending on property location and searches required
  • Ask about: Lifetime ISA / Help to Buy ISA redemption fee, gifted deposit AML if applicable
  • Watch out for: new build supplement if buying off-plan

First-time buyer? We will explain every step.

Buying your first home is exciting — but the legal process can feel overwhelming. NPS Law guides you through every stage clearly, with a fixed fee and no jargon. Get a quote today.

Home Movers (Selling and Buying Simultaneously)

You face the most complex scenario: two transactions that must exchange and complete on the same day. Chain management is critical, and an experienced, communicative solicitor is worth every penny of the difference between a cheap and a quality service.

  • Legal fees: two sets — estimate £1,200–£2,500 combined for typical transactions
  • Disbursements: primarily on the purchase side — £600–£1,200
  • Leasehold management pack: if selling leasehold, budget £300–£800 and order early
  • Ask about: combined sale and purchase discount — many firms offer one
Over-55s and Downsizers

Downsizing often involves selling a larger property and buying something smaller. The legal process is the same, but a few additional considerations apply:

  • If selling a leasehold flat, management pack fees and leasehold supplements apply to your sale
  • Equity release on the new property is a separate legal process with its own fees — ask for a separate quote
  • If gifting money to children from the proceeds, your solicitor may need to document this for AML compliance
Property Investors (Buy-to-Let)

Investors face a higher Stamp Duty burden — a 3% surcharge on the full purchase price applies to additional dwellings in England. Legal fees are broadly similar to standard residential transactions, though tenancy-related issues may add to the complexity.

  • SDLT 3% surcharge: on a £250,000 purchase, this adds £7,500 to your tax bill alone
  • Legal fees: similar to standard residential, but tenancy-related work may add £100–£300
  • Limited company purchases require additional corporate documentation
Executors of an Estate (Probate Sales)

Selling a property as part of a probate estate requires your solicitor to verify the title, confirm your authority as executor, and in some cases deal with an unregistered title. This is specialist work with specific requirements.

  • You cannot exchange contracts on a probate sale until the Grant of Probate is issued
  • Legal fees: typically £800–£1,500 for a straightforward probate sale
  • Unregistered properties (common in older estates) add cost for first registration
  • NPS Law handles probate conveyancing as part of our complete estate administration service

[INFOGRAPHIC PLACEHOLDER]

Infographic: Typical total legal costs by life stage — FTB vs Home Mover vs Investor vs Probate Sale, shown as a horizontal bar chart

9. Regional Differences in Solicitor Fees

Solicitor fees broadly reflect local property markets and regional operating costs. As a general rule, London and the South East attract the highest fees; the North of England, Wales, and the Midlands tend to be somewhat lower.

RegionBuy Fee (£300k freehold)Sell Fee (£300k freehold)Notes
London£900–£1,500£700–£1,200High leasehold rate; higher property values
South East£800–£1,200£650–£1,000Similar pattern to London
Midlands£650–£950£500–£800Strong value for money
North of England£600–£850£450–£750Lower property prices reduce some costs
Wales£600–£900£500–£750Welsh Land Transaction Tax applies (not SDLT)

FACT-CHECKED: Scotland and Northern Ireland

The fee ranges and disbursements in this guide apply to England and Wales only. Scotland and Northern Ireland operate under different legal systems with different processes and costs. If you are buying or selling in Scotland (where Missives replace contracts) or Northern Ireland, please seek advice from a locally qualified solicitor.

10. Why Choose NPS Law for Your Conveyancing?

NPS Law is a full-service solicitors firm with deep expertise in residential and commercial property law. We act for buyers, sellers, landlords, developers, and executors across England and Wales.

Fixed, transparent fees — no hidden charges

Your quote is your price. We itemise everything before you instruct.

SRA-regulated solicitors — not a conveyancing factory

Your file is handled by a named, qualified solicitor — not passed through a call centre.

Specialists across all transaction types

Freehold, leasehold, new build, probate, shared ownership — we have the expertise.

Dedicated point of contact throughout

You will have a named solicitor who knows your case and responds to your calls and emails promptly.

Get your free, no-obligation quote from NPS Law

Tell us about your transaction — buying, selling, or both — and we will provide a clear, itemised quote with no hidden extras. Call us on [PHONE] or complete our online enquiry form at nps-law.co.uk.

11. Frequently Asked Questions

Q1: What is the average solicitor fee for buying a house in the UK in 2026?

The average legal fee for buying a house is approximately £700–£1,100 (excluding VAT and disbursements), depending on the property’s value and type. When disbursements are added, most standard residential purchases total £1,200–£2,500. Leasehold properties and new builds attract higher fees.

Q2: Do buyers and sellers each pay their own solicitor?

Yes. Both the buyer and the seller instruct and pay their own solicitor independently. There is no cost sharing between parties. Each solicitor acts exclusively for their own client — in residential transactions, one firm cannot act for both buyer and seller simultaneously.

Q3: Can I add solicitor fees to my mortgage?

No. Conveyancing fees cannot be added to your mortgage. Your lender requires these to be paid from your own funds. However, many solicitors allow payment in stages — an initial deposit at instruction, then the balance at or after completion — which can help with cash flow planning.

Q4: What happens to solicitor fees if my purchase falls through?

If your solicitor offers No Move, No Fee, the professional legal fee is waived if the transaction does not complete before exchange. However, disbursements already paid (searches, AML checks, Land Registry fees) are not refundable. Always ask for a written explanation of what the guarantee covers before instructing.

Q5: Are solicitor fees negotiable?

To a limited extent. Fixed-fee quotes are generally just that — fixed. For straightforward transactions (freehold, no chain, no complications), you can ask whether a discount is available. In practice, you are more likely to get a better price by comparing several firms than by negotiating with one.

Q6: Is a licensed conveyancer the same as a solicitor?

No, but both are regulated professionals who can handle residential conveyancing. A licensed conveyancer specialises exclusively in property law and is regulated by the CLC — they are often cheaper than solicitors. A solicitor is a fully qualified lawyer regulated by the SRA and can handle a wider range of legal matters. For most standard residential transactions, a licensed conveyancer is entirely suitable.

Q7: How long does conveyancing take, and do delays increase the fee?

The average residential transaction takes 10–16 weeks from instruction to completion. Most solicitors charge a fixed fee regardless of how long the transaction takes, so delays caused by the other side of the chain do not normally increase your bill. However, if additional work emerges — for example, a defective title issue or an unexpected planning restriction — supplemental fees may be charged.

Disclaimer

This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Fee ranges are indicative and based on market data current as of March 2026. Your actual fees will depend on the specific circumstances of your transaction. NPS Law Solicitors is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. For advice specific to your situation, please contact our team directly.

References