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New Build Solicitor Fees: What to Expect and How to Budget

New Build Solicitor Fees: What to Expect and How to Budget
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New Build Solicitor Fees: What to Expect and How to Budget

By New-Builds Team

Buying a new build home involves significantly more legal work than purchasing an existing property, yet many buyers are caught off guard by the complexity and cost of the conveyancing process. A new build purchase requires your solicitor to review and negotiate detailed contract packages from the developer's legal team, examine planning permissions and building regulations approvals, check that the development complies with relevant standards, deal with phased completion timescales, register new titles with the Land Registry, and handle the intricacies of leasehold arrangements that are common on new build estates. All of this additional work means that new build conveyancing typically costs 20 to 40 percent more than a standard resale purchase, and the total legal bill including all disbursements and searches can easily exceed £3,000 to £4,500 for a typical transaction. Understanding these costs upfront and budgeting for them accurately is essential, because running short of funds close to completion can cause serious problems, including potentially losing your reservation and any associated deposits.

The importance of choosing the right solicitor for a new build purchase cannot be overstated. New build conveyancing is a specialist area, and not all solicitors have the experience or expertise to handle it effectively. A solicitor who primarily deals with standard resales may not spot issues in the developer's contract that a new build specialist would identify immediately, such as unfavourable management company terms, excessive estate charges, restrictive covenants that could affect future use, or completion timescales that put you at financial risk. The additional cost of instructing a genuine new build specialist, which might be £200 to £500 more than the cheapest conveyancing quote, is one of the best investments you can make in the entire home-buying process. In this guide, we will provide a complete breakdown of every cost involved in new build conveyancing, explain what each fee covers, compare different types of solicitor quotes, advise on when to instruct your solicitor for optimal results, and show you how to budget accurately so there are no nasty surprises. For a broader view of costs after your purchase completes, see our guide on financial planning after buying your new build home.

Complete Fee Breakdown: What You Will Pay

Solicitor fees for new build purchases consist of two main categories: the solicitor's own legal fees for their professional work, and disbursements, which are third-party costs that the solicitor pays on your behalf. Both categories need to be understood and budgeted for, as the total bill is the sum of both. Let us examine each component in detail.

£3,800Typical Total Cost
Legal Fees (40%)
Searches (24%)
Land Registry (16%)
Other Disbursements (20%)

Solicitor's Legal Fees

The solicitor's legal fee covers all the professional work they undertake on your behalf. For a new build purchase, this is substantially more extensive than a standard resale. Your solicitor will review the entire developer's contract pack (which can run to several hundred pages), negotiate any unfavourable terms on your behalf, carry out title checks and examine the developer's title to the land, review planning permissions and building regulations approvals, check that the property complies with NHBC or equivalent warranty requirements, examine management company documentation, report to your mortgage lender, handle the exchange and completion process, and register the purchase with the Land Registry.

Online Conveyancer (New Build)£1,000 – £1,500 + VAT
High Street Solicitor (New Build)£1,200 – £1,800 + VAT
New Build Specialist Firm£1,400 – £2,200 + VAT
London / Premium Firm£1,800 – £3,000 + VAT

Most solicitors will add a new build supplement to their standard conveyancing fee, typically £200 to £500, reflecting the additional work involved. Some also charge separate supplements for leasehold properties (£200 to £400), Help to Buy or shared ownership transactions (£200 to £400), and acting for the mortgage lender (£100 to £200, though many include this in their standard fee). Always ask for a fully itemised quote that includes all supplements so you can compare like-for-like.

VAT at 20 percent is added to the solicitor's legal fees, which is a significant additional cost. A legal fee quoted at £1,500 plus VAT will actually cost you £1,800. Make sure you are comparing quotes on the same basis, as some solicitors quote inclusive of VAT and others quote exclusive. The total legal fee including VAT for a typical new build freehold purchase in 2025 ranges from £1,200 to £2,640, with most buyers paying between £1,500 and £2,000 inclusive of VAT.

Disbursements: Third-Party Costs

Disbursements are the costs your solicitor incurs on your behalf from third parties. Unlike legal fees, these costs are broadly similar regardless of which solicitor you instruct, as they are set by the organisations providing the services. However, the specific searches required can vary by location and property type, so the total disbursement cost is not completely fixed.

Disbursement Breakdown
Local Authority Searches
Planning history, road schemes, contamination
£200–£450
Environmental Search
Flood risk, contaminated land, subsidence
£80–£150
Water & Drainage Search
Mains connections, public sewers, drains
£40–£70
Land Registry Title Search
Official copies of title and plan
£6–£30
Land Registry Registration Fee
Registering your ownership (varies by price)
£135–£455
Bankruptcy Search (per buyer)
Required by your mortgage lender
£2 each
Priority Search (OS1)
Protects your registration for 30 days
£2
Stamp Duty Land Tax Return
Filing your SDLT return with HMRC
£0–£75
Bank Transfer Fees
Telegraphic transfer of completion funds
£30–£50 each
AML / ID Verification
Anti-money laundering checks (per person)
£10–£30 each
Additional Searches (if needed)
Mining, chancel, HS2, commons, etc.
£20–£100 each

The Land Registry registration fee deserves special mention because it is scaled according to the property price. For properties costing up to £100,000, the fee is £50 (or £40 for online submissions). For properties between £100,001 and £200,000, it is £100 (£70 online). Between £200,001 and £500,000, which covers most new build purchases, it is £190 (£135 online). For properties over £500,001, the fee rises to £320 (£270 online), and for properties over £1,000,001, it is £585 (£455 online). Your solicitor will almost certainly submit the application online, so you will benefit from the lower fees.

Property Under £200k
£70
LR Registration Fee
Property £200k–£500k
£135
LR Registration Fee
Property £500k–£1m
£270
LR Registration Fee
Property Over £1m
£455
LR Registration Fee

Total Cost Examples by Property Price

To give you a realistic picture of total conveyancing costs, here are worked examples for new build freehold purchases at different price points. These include the solicitor's legal fees (at mid-range rates), all standard disbursements, and VAT. They do not include Stamp Duty Land Tax, which is a separate cost paid through your solicitor but not a conveyancing fee.

Total Conveyancing Costs by Property Value
£2,800
£200k
£3,300
£300k
£3,800
£400k
£4,400
£500k
£5,200
£750k
Includes legal fees + VAT, all standard disbursements. Excludes SDLT.

For leasehold new build properties (which are common for apartments and some houses on managed estates), add approximately £300 to £600 to these figures. The additional cost covers the review of the lease terms, management company documentation, ground rent provisions, service charge accounts, and any deed of covenant requirements. If you are purchasing through shared ownership, add a further £200 to £500 for the additional work involved in dealing with the housing association's lease and requirements.

Comparing Solicitor Quotes: What to Look For

When comparing conveyancing quotes, the headline fee is only part of the picture. Two solicitors quoting apparently similar legal fees can end up costing very different amounts once all disbursements, supplements, and VAT are included. To compare quotes fairly, you need to look at the total cost including everything. Here are the key elements to check in every quote.

First, confirm whether the quote includes VAT. Some solicitors quote exclusive of VAT, which adds 20 percent to the legal fee portion. Second, check whether the quote includes all likely disbursements or just the legal fee. A quote that appears cheap but only covers the legal fee will not look so attractive when you add £800 to £1,500 of disbursements on top. Third, look for any supplements that might apply to your specific situation, including new build supplements, leasehold supplements, Help to Buy or shared ownership supplements, acting for your mortgage lender, and any completion deadline supplements if you have a tight timescale.

Cheapest Online Quote
Headline Fee£595
New Build Supplement£350
Leasehold Supplement£300
Lender Panel Fee£150
VAT (20%)£279
Disbursements£850
Real Total£2,524
Specialist Fixed-Fee Quote
All-Inclusive Legal Fee£1,650
Supplements IncludedAll included
Lender Panel FeeIncluded
VAT (20%)£330
Disbursements£850
Real Total£2,830

In this comparison, the cheapest online quote initially appears to save over £1,000 on the headline fee, but once all supplements and VAT are added, the real difference is only £306. For that modest difference, the specialist firm likely offers significantly more new build experience, a dedicated case handler rather than a call centre, and direct access to the solicitor handling your matter. When you consider that your solicitor's work protects a purchase worth hundreds of thousands of pounds, spending an extra £300 for genuine expertise is a small price to pay.

When to Instruct Your Solicitor

Timing is critically important when buying a new build, and instructing your solicitor at the right moment can prevent delays and protect your interests. The ideal time to instruct your solicitor is as soon as you have reserved your plot and before you pay any reservation fee. This is because your solicitor can advise you on the terms of the reservation agreement, which may contain clauses that could disadvantage you if you need to withdraw later.

If you have already paid your reservation fee, instruct your solicitor as soon as possible afterwards. The developer's solicitors will send a contract pack to your solicitor within a few days to a few weeks of reservation, and your solicitor needs time to review this thoroughly. Most reservation agreements give you 28 days to exchange contracts, though this is often extended in practice. Having your solicitor already instructed and ready to receive the contract pack means no time is wasted.

Week 1
Reservation & Instruction. Reserve your plot and instruct your solicitor simultaneously. Pay the reservation fee. Your solicitor begins ID checks and opens your file.
Weeks 2–3
Contract Review. Developer's solicitors send the contract pack. Your solicitor reviews the contract, title, planning permissions, and all supporting documentation. Searches are ordered.
Weeks 3–5
Enquiries & Negotiation. Your solicitor raises enquiries with the developer's solicitors on any issues identified. Negotiates contract terms if needed. Search results are received and reviewed.
Weeks 4–6
Report & Mortgage. Your solicitor provides you with a comprehensive report on the property. Mortgage offer is received and reviewed. Final queries are resolved.
Week 5–8
Exchange of Contracts. Once you are satisfied with the solicitor's report and your mortgage is in place, you sign the contract and exchange. Your deposit (usually 10% of the purchase price minus the reservation fee) is paid.
Completion
Completion Day. When the property is ready (which could be weeks or months after exchange on a new build), your solicitor transfers the balance of the purchase price and you collect your keys. SDLT is paid and registration with the Land Registry is submitted.

The Developer's Solicitor Costs

An important point that some buyers overlook is that the developer has their own solicitors whose costs are ultimately borne by the buyer as part of the purchase price. While you do not pay the developer's legal fees directly, understanding their role helps explain why new build purchases take the form they do and why certain terms appear in the contract.

The developer's solicitors prepare the contract pack, deal with title matters on the developer's side, handle the exchange and completion process from the developer's perspective, and manage the legal aspects of any incentives or part-exchange deals. Their costs are typically £500 to £1,500 per plot, which is built into the sale price of each home. In some cases, the developer may also require the buyer to contribute towards their legal costs, although this is uncommon and should be resisted by your solicitor if it appears in the contract.

No Completion, No Fee: Understanding the Promise

Many conveyancing firms advertise a "no completion, no fee" policy, meaning you do not pay their legal fees if your purchase falls through before completion. This can be an attractive safeguard, particularly with new build purchases where there are various risks of the transaction not proceeding, such as the developer failing to complete the build on time, mortgage offers expiring, or defects being discovered during the build process.

However, it is important to understand the limitations of this promise. The "no fee" element typically applies only to the solicitor's own legal fees, not to disbursements. If searches have been ordered and paid for before the transaction falls through, you will usually be liable for those costs, which can total £300 to £600. Some firms also exclude their no-completion-no-fee policy from certain circumstances, such as if you withdraw voluntarily rather than the transaction falling through due to external factors. Always read the terms carefully before relying on this protection.

How to Choose the Right Solicitor

Choosing the right solicitor for your new build purchase is one of the most important decisions you will make during the buying process. Here are the key factors to consider, in order of importance.

New build experience: This is non-negotiable. Your solicitor should handle new build conveyancing regularly and be familiar with the contract formats used by major developers. Ask specifically how many new build transactions they have completed in the past year. A firm handling fewer than 20 new build purchases per year may not have sufficient depth of experience.

Mortgage lender panel membership: Your solicitor must be on the panel of your mortgage lender. If they are not, you will need to instruct a separate solicitor to act for the lender, which means paying two sets of legal fees. Check panel membership before instructing, especially if you are using a smaller or specialist lender.

Communication and accessibility: New build purchases can move quickly, especially around exchange and completion. You need a solicitor who responds promptly to emails and calls, provides regular updates without being chased, and is available to act quickly when needed. Poor communication is the single most common complaint about conveyancing solicitors and can cause genuine financial harm if deadlines are missed.

Fixed fees: A fixed-fee quote that includes all standard services and supplements provides certainty about your costs. Avoid firms that quote low headline fees and then add multiple supplements and unexpected charges as the transaction progresses. The best firms provide a fully transparent fee schedule at the outset that covers every foreseeable element of the transaction.

Reviews and recommendations: Check online reviews on Google, Trustpilot, and the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) website. Ask friends or family who have recently bought new builds for recommendations. Your mortgage broker may also be able to recommend solicitors with strong new build track records, though be aware that some brokers receive referral fees for recommendations, which does not necessarily mean the firm is the best choice for you.

Budgeting for Your Conveyancing Costs

Based on everything covered in this guide, here is a practical budgeting guide for new build conveyancing costs in 2025. These figures represent typical ranges; your actual costs may be higher or lower depending on the specific property, location, and solicitor you choose.

Budget Checklist: New Build Conveyancing
Solicitor's legal fee (incl. VAT)£1,500 – £2,640
Searches (local, environmental, water)£350 – £650
Land Registry fees£70 – £455
Bank transfers, AML checks, misc£80 – £180
Leasehold supplement (if applicable)£0 – £600
Total to Budget£2,500 – £4,500

We recommend budgeting towards the higher end of these ranges to avoid being caught short. If your actual costs come in lower, you will have a welcome surplus that can go towards your emergency fund. If you budget too low, you may find yourself scrambling to find additional funds at the most stressful point of the purchase process.

Remember that these conveyancing costs are separate from your deposit, stamp duty, mortgage fees, and moving costs. The total cash needed to complete a new build purchase is the sum of all these elements, and underestimating any one of them can jeopardise the entire transaction. A thorough budget that accounts for every cost, with a contingency buffer of 10 to 15 percent, is the best foundation for a smooth and successful purchase.

Common Conveyancing Pitfalls on New Build Purchases

Even with an experienced solicitor, there are several common pitfalls that can catch new build buyers off guard. Being aware of these in advance allows you to ask the right questions and ensure your solicitor is addressing them proactively rather than reactively.

The most frequent issue is inadequate long-stop date protection. The long-stop date is the final deadline by which the developer must complete the property and be ready for you to move in. If the property is not ready by this date, you may have the right to withdraw from the contract and recover your deposit. However, many developer contracts set the long-stop date extremely late, sometimes 18 to 24 months after the expected completion date, giving the developer an unreasonably long window to finish. A good solicitor will negotiate a tighter long-stop date, typically 6 to 12 months after the anticipated completion, to protect you from indefinite delays.

Unfavourable management company arrangements are another significant concern, particularly on leasehold new build estates. Some developers set up management companies that charge excessive fees, have contracts with affiliated maintenance firms at above-market rates, or include terms that make it difficult for residents to take control of the management company once the development is complete. Your solicitor should review these arrangements carefully and flag any terms that could lead to inflated costs in the future. Estate management charges on freehold new build homes are a related concern, as some developers impose annual maintenance charges for shared open spaces, play areas, and drainage systems that can be substantial and are not always clearly disclosed during the sales process.

Ground rent clauses on older leasehold new build purchases (those sold before the Leasehold Reform Act 2022 banned ground rent on most new residential leases) can contain escalating provisions that dramatically increase the ground rent over time. While new leases granted after June 2022 for residential properties must set ground rent at a peppercorn (effectively zero), if you are buying a property that was first sold before this date and still has the original lease, you may inherit ground rent obligations. Your solicitor should check the ground rent provisions in the lease and advise you if they are onerous.

What Happens at Exchange and Completion

Understanding the exchange and completion process helps you prepare financially and practically for the two most critical days in your purchase. Exchange of contracts is the point at which you become legally committed to buying the property. Before exchange, either party can walk away without penalty (apart from losing any reservation fee). After exchange, pulling out has serious financial consequences, including losing your deposit and potentially being sued for any losses the developer incurs.

At exchange, you will need to pay a deposit, which for new build purchases is usually 10 percent of the full purchase price minus any reservation fee already paid. On a £300,000 property with a £500 reservation fee, the exchange deposit would be £29,500. This money is held by the developer's solicitors and is at risk if you fail to complete the purchase for a reason not covered by the contract. If you are also selling an existing property, your solicitor will normally use the proceeds from that sale to fund the exchange deposit, but first-time buyers and anyone not in a chain will need to have this money available in cash.

Completion is when the remaining balance of the purchase price is transferred and you receive the keys. Your solicitor will request the mortgage funds from your lender a few days before completion and combine them with your remaining cash contribution to transfer the full purchase amount to the developer's solicitors. The solicitor will also pay Stamp Duty Land Tax on your behalf using funds you have provided, and they will submit the Land Registry application to register you as the new owner. The completion process for new builds can sometimes happen at very short notice, with developers giving only a week or two of warning once the property passes its final inspections. Having your mortgage offer in place, your funds ready, and your solicitor prepared to act quickly is essential to avoid delays that could jeopardise your purchase.

After completion, your solicitor's work continues for several weeks. They will submit the Stamp Duty Land Tax return to HMRC (which must be done within 14 days of completion), register your ownership with the Land Registry (which can take several months for new titles), send you copies of all final documentation, and account for any remaining funds held on your behalf. You should receive a final completion statement showing every payment made and received, which you should keep with your property records alongside your warranty documentation and other important property paperwork.

Stamp Duty: A Major Additional Cost to Plan For

While Stamp Duty Land Tax (SDLT) is not technically a solicitor fee, it is paid through your solicitor as part of the completion process and represents one of the largest single costs of buying a home. Understanding how SDLT applies to your purchase is essential for accurate budgeting. First-time buyers currently benefit from a significant relief, paying no SDLT on the first £425,000 of a property costing up to £625,000. For non-first-time buyers, the nil-rate band is £250,000, with a rate of 5 percent applying to the portion between £250,001 and £925,000.

£250,000 (FTB) — Stamp Duty£0
£350,000 (FTB) — Stamp Duty£0
£450,000 (FTB) — Stamp Duty£1,250
£350,000 (Non-FTB) — Stamp Duty£5,000
£500,000 (Non-FTB) — Stamp Duty£12,500

Your solicitor will calculate the exact SDLT liability and collect the funds from you before completion. It is essential that you know the precise amount well in advance so you can ensure the funds are available. Your solicitor should provide the SDLT calculation as part of their report on the property, giving you time to prepare. If you are buying through shared ownership, the SDLT rules are slightly different and can work in your favour, as you may be able to elect to pay SDLT only on your initial share rather than the full property value, though this has implications if you later staircase to 100 percent ownership.

Using a Developer-Recommended Solicitor: Pros and Cons

Many developers offer to recommend a solicitor when you reserve your plot, and some even offer financial incentives such as contributions towards your legal fees if you use their recommended firm. While these incentives can be tempting, it is important to understand both the advantages and potential drawbacks before accepting.

The main advantage of using a developer-recommended solicitor is that they are likely to be familiar with the developer's standard contract terms, which can speed up the review process. They may also have an established working relationship with the developer's legal team, which can facilitate smoother communication and faster resolution of queries. The financial contribution offered by the developer, typically £500 to £1,000 towards your legal fees, is a genuine saving that reduces your overall purchase costs.

However, there are important caveats. The recommended solicitor is paid a referral fee by the developer for each case they receive, which creates a potential conflict of interest. While they are still legally obligated to act in your best interests, there is a natural commercial incentive to maintain a good relationship with the developer who provides them with a steady stream of business. This does not mean they will act improperly, but it does mean you should be particularly vigilant about ensuring they are scrutinising the contract as rigorously as a fully independent solicitor would. If you choose to use a developer-recommended firm, ask them specifically whether they have raised any enquiries or negotiated any changes to the standard contract for previous buyers on the same development. If they have accepted the developer's standard terms without question for every buyer, this may indicate a less rigorous approach to your protection.

Key Takeaways
New build conveyancing costs £2,500 to £4,500+ including all fees and disbursements
Always compare quotes on a total cost basis including VAT, supplements, and disbursements
Choose a solicitor with proven new build experience — the cheapest quote is rarely the best value
Instruct your solicitor at the same time as reserving your plot to avoid delays
Budget towards the higher end of estimates and keep a 10-15% contingency
Check your solicitor is on your mortgage lender's panel before instructing

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